Browse content similar to 05/02/2018. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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Hello. A very good morning. | 0:00:13 | 0:00:14 | |
This is Breakfast, with Dan Walker
and Louise Minchin. | 0:00:14 | 0:00:17 | |
The start of a crucial
week of Brexit talks. | 0:00:17 | 0:00:19 | |
As the EU's Chief Negotiator arrives
in London, Downing Street moves | 0:00:19 | 0:00:22 | |
to shore up divisions
in the Conservative party. | 0:00:22 | 0:00:30 | |
Good morning. | 0:00:40 | 0:00:41 | |
It's Monday the fifth of February. | 0:00:41 | 0:00:42 | |
Also this morning: | 0:00:42 | 0:00:43 | |
A man suspected of carrying out
the terror attacks that killed 130 | 0:00:43 | 0:00:46 | |
people in Paris three years ago,
is going on trial in Belgium. | 0:00:46 | 0:00:50 | |
The Duchess of Cambridge isses
a personal message calling | 0:00:50 | 0:00:52 | |
on parents and teachers to help
children feel happy with themselves. | 0:00:52 | 0:01:00 | |
Whether we are school leaders,
teachers, support staff, or parents, | 0:01:02 | 0:01:05 | |
we each have a crucial role to play. | 0:01:05 | 0:01:08 | |
Good morning. | 0:01:08 | 0:01:09 | |
One of our big name banks has banned
customers from buying controversial | 0:01:09 | 0:01:12 | |
cryptocurrency Bitcoin
on their credit cards. | 0:01:12 | 0:01:14 | |
I'm looking at why they've done
it and what it means | 0:01:14 | 0:01:17 | |
for eight million customers. | 0:01:17 | 0:01:18 | |
Good morning. | 0:01:18 | 0:01:18 | |
And in sport, a suprise win
for the underdogs in America's Super | 0:01:18 | 0:01:22 | |
Bowl. | 0:01:22 | 0:01:22 | |
The Philadelphia Eagles
beat the favourites, | 0:01:22 | 0:01:23 | |
the New England Patriots,
by 40 to 33. | 0:01:23 | 0:01:26 | |
It's the first time
they've won the title. | 0:01:26 | 0:01:30 | |
Let me hear you, Minneapolis! | 0:01:30 | 0:01:34 | |
And Justin Timberlake wows
the crowds at half time. | 0:01:34 | 0:01:37 | |
ending up dancing in the crowd. | 0:01:37 | 0:01:39 | |
And it's getting cold out there. | 0:01:39 | 0:01:41 | |
Carol can tell us how cold. | 0:01:41 | 0:01:44 | |
A few warnings. Good morning. A cold
start to the day. The | 0:01:44 | 0:01:55 | |
start to the day. The risk of ice on
untreated surfaces. Wind from the | 0:02:01 | 0:02:03 | |
east. Some of us will have snow from
the West. I will have more in 15 | 0:02:03 | 0:02:08 | |
minutes. Thank you. | 0:02:08 | 0:02:09 | |
Good morning. | 0:02:09 | 0:02:09 | |
First, our main story. | 0:02:09 | 0:02:10 | |
The EU's Chief Negotiator,
Michel Barnier, will visit | 0:02:10 | 0:02:13 | |
Downing Street today for talks
about a possible transitional period | 0:02:13 | 0:02:15 | |
after Britain leaves
the European Union. | 0:02:15 | 0:02:17 | |
The Government has indicated it
remains determined to leave | 0:02:17 | 0:02:19 | |
the European Customs
Union after Brexit. | 0:02:19 | 0:02:21 | |
The move is seen as an attempt
to defuse a growing row | 0:02:21 | 0:02:24 | |
within the Conservative Party. | 0:02:24 | 0:02:25 | |
Our political correspondent,
Chris Mason, joins us now. | 0:02:25 | 0:02:30 | |
He is not in Westminster! Let us
know what is happening. It has | 0:02:30 | 0:02:41 | |
unlocked the Brexit process. Michel
Barnier, we regularly hear about him | 0:02:41 | 0:02:46 | |
in the news, but he is perhaps not
widely known, he will be having | 0:02:46 | 0:02:50 | |
lunch in Downing Street today with
David Davis. He comes from the | 0:02:50 | 0:02:56 | |
south-east of France. Is that place
rings a bell, the 1992 winter | 0:02:56 | 0:03:07 | |
Olympics was held there. He was a
politician that was crucial in it | 0:03:07 | 0:03:12 | |
being a success. In the 1990s he was
the Europe minister for France. John | 0:03:12 | 0:03:22 | |
Major is | 0:03:22 | 0:03:32 | |
Major is the person who was working
with him then. And they are talking | 0:03:32 | 0:03:35 | |
about the transition arrangement. | 0:03:35 | 0:03:41 | |
about the transition arrangement. A
two-year period at the end of Brexit | 0:03:41 | 0:03:43 | |
in March next year. In that meeting,
Theresa May will drop by. Not | 0:03:43 | 0:03:47 | |
unusual, she lives there. A big
thing for her today is the customs | 0:03:47 | 0:03:53 | |
union. So many ridiculous phrases
thrown around in the Brexit context. | 0:03:53 | 0:04:00 | |
It means while we are in the EU,
when we sell stuff to other | 0:04:00 | 0:04:04 | |
countries, no additional tax or
tariff is added. In addition to | 0:04:04 | 0:04:14 | |
that, there is an agreed tariff,
additional tax, for all of the goods | 0:04:14 | 0:04:19 | |
sold outside of the European Union.
The British government is making it | 0:04:19 | 0:04:23 | |
clear this morning we are definitely
leaving the customs union. This | 0:04:23 | 0:04:27 | |
matters because it has been
absolutely essential to the row | 0:04:27 | 0:04:30 | |
involving the next character, Jacob
Rees-Mogg, a one man rolling news | 0:04:30 | 0:04:37 | |
channel at the moment. Never off the
television, talking about Brexit. He | 0:04:37 | 0:04:44 | |
is a guard dog for the true, real
Brexit as far as Conservative | 0:04:44 | 0:04:49 | |
Eurosceptics are concerned. He has
been described as a red telephone | 0:04:49 | 0:04:55 | |
box in human form. He is a
traditionalist, standing up for the | 0:04:55 | 0:05:01 | |
essence of Britain. The strength of
his argument and how vociferous it | 0:05:01 | 0:05:07 | |
is has caused Theresa May a bit of
anguish. Even though he will not be | 0:05:07 | 0:05:13 | |
at the meetings today, you can
imagine a cardboard cutout of him | 0:05:13 | 0:05:17 | |
propped up against the wall in
Downing Street. Very interesting, | 0:05:17 | 0:05:21 | |
and thank you for talking to us in
bringing in your guests. Plenty more | 0:05:21 | 0:05:28 | |
later on. | 0:05:28 | 0:05:29 | |
A new ring-fenced tax to fund
the NHS and social care in England | 0:05:29 | 0:05:32 | |
has been proposed by
a panel of health experts. | 0:05:32 | 0:05:35 | |
The panel, commissioned
by the Liberal Democrats | 0:05:35 | 0:05:36 | |
which includes the former head
of NHS England Sir David Nicholson, | 0:05:36 | 0:05:39 | |
has also recommended a return
of caps on personal payments | 0:05:39 | 0:05:42 | |
for adult social care. | 0:05:42 | 0:05:43 | |
Here's our health editor, Hugh Pym. | 0:05:43 | 0:05:45 | |
Thousands of demonstrators marched
through London at the weekend, | 0:05:45 | 0:05:47 | |
calling for increased
funding for the NHS. | 0:05:47 | 0:05:49 | |
Health unions joined other
campaigners, arguing | 0:05:49 | 0:05:51 | |
there was a winter crisis
which needed urgent | 0:05:51 | 0:05:53 | |
action and investment. | 0:05:53 | 0:06:00 | |
Today, a report from health experts,
including the former head of NHS | 0:06:00 | 0:06:03 | |
England, has called for new answers
to NHS funding problems. | 0:06:03 | 0:06:06 | |
The report commissioned
by the Liberal Democrats calls | 0:06:06 | 0:06:08 | |
for an extra £4 billion on top
of inflation for the NHS in England | 0:06:08 | 0:06:12 | |
in the next financial year,
more than double the increase | 0:06:12 | 0:06:19 | |
announced in the budget. | 0:06:19 | 0:06:21 | |
A single, ring-fenced tax for health | 0:06:21 | 0:06:25 | |
and social care replacing
National Insurance. | 0:06:25 | 0:06:31 | |
And reinstating | 0:06:31 | 0:06:32 | |
a commitment to cap the costs paid
by individuals for social care. | 0:06:32 | 0:06:35 | |
The report argues that higher
funding needed for health and care | 0:06:35 | 0:06:38 | |
should come through increased
taxation, and that this will be more | 0:06:38 | 0:06:41 | |
transparent if there is a dedicated
tax for this purpose. | 0:06:41 | 0:06:43 | |
Longer waiting lists and rationing
for some treatments, | 0:06:43 | 0:06:46 | |
it says, are undermining the key
principles of the NHS. | 0:06:46 | 0:06:48 | |
In response, the Department
of Health and Social Care said | 0:06:48 | 0:06:51 | |
the NHS had been prioritised
in the budget, and an extra £2 | 0:06:51 | 0:06:54 | |
billion had already been provided
for social care in England. | 0:06:54 | 0:06:57 | |
Hugh Pym, BBC News. | 0:06:57 | 0:07:00 | |
The sole surviving suspect behind
the Paris terror attacks in 2015 | 0:07:00 | 0:07:03 | |
will go on trial in Belgium today. | 0:07:03 | 0:07:05 | |
Salah Abdeslam faces charges
relating to a shoot-out he had | 0:07:05 | 0:07:08 | |
with police while on the run
in Belgium in 2016. | 0:07:08 | 0:07:10 | |
He faces a second trial relating
to his involvement in the Paris | 0:07:10 | 0:07:14 | |
attacks at a later date. | 0:07:14 | 0:07:17 | |
Customers of the Lloyds Banking
Group have been banned from buying | 0:07:20 | 0:07:25 | |
crypto currencies like Bitcoin. They
say they are protecting 8 million | 0:07:25 | 0:07:30 | |
customers from getting debt they
could not repay. Bitcoin, what is | 0:07:30 | 0:07:34 | |
it? Thank you for that. A good
start. It is a virtual currency, on | 0:07:34 | 0:07:41 | |
line only. It is a type of money not
physical in any way. It does not | 0:07:41 | 0:07:48 | |
have a Central Bank like the Bank of
England to print a £5 note. It is | 0:07:48 | 0:07:52 | |
like a computer file. One Bitcoin is
like a computer file generated by a | 0:07:52 | 0:07:58 | |
complicated mathematical formula,
like the encryption news. That is | 0:07:58 | 0:08:05 | |
why you hear the phrase
cryptocurrency. It is a currency. | 0:08:05 | 0:08:09 | |
People have started accepting it
around the world, many more than | 0:08:09 | 0:08:14 | |
before, businesses and individuals,
as a form of cash. You can buy goods | 0:08:14 | 0:08:18 | |
and services with it. That is why we
saw a growth in recent years. It is | 0:08:18 | 0:08:23 | |
a new concept. Why have Lloyds done
this? The price of Bitcoin has many | 0:08:23 | 0:08:30 | |
people involved in it. One year ago
it was worth £700. In November, it | 0:08:30 | 0:08:35 | |
shot up to £30,000 for one Bitcoin.
-- £13,000. At the moment, low | 0:08:35 | 0:08:45 | |
interest rates, not much of a return
for their money, people are | 0:08:45 | 0:08:50 | |
interested it is very volatile.
November, £13,000 to be now it is | 0:08:50 | 0:08:57 | |
under £6,000. If you got involved
last November, you would have lost | 0:08:57 | 0:09:03 | |
nearly half of your money. That
volatility has a lot of people | 0:09:03 | 0:09:07 | |
cautious about returns on it. You
could lose a lot of money, you could | 0:09:07 | 0:09:11 | |
make a lot of money. Lloyds Bank is
worried people will use credit cards | 0:09:11 | 0:09:17 | |
to get debt to pay for Bitcoins and
then lose all of their money. Thank | 0:09:17 | 0:09:22 | |
you very much. I enjoy that. It is
not often you do that at ten parsecs | 0:09:22 | 0:09:29 | |
in the morning. -- 6:10. | 0:09:29 | 0:09:40 | |
Mothers earn about 30% less than
similarly educated fathers by the | 0:09:40 | 0:09:47 | |
age of 30. | 0:09:47 | 0:09:50 | |
A new mental health campaign
to encourage children "to be | 0:09:50 | 0:09:53 | |
comfortable in their own
skin" is being supported | 0:09:53 | 0:09:55 | |
by The Duchess of Cambridge. | 0:09:55 | 0:09:57 | |
Her Royal Highness, Kate Middleton
is pregnant with her third child | 0:09:57 | 0:10:00 | |
and says adults should help
encourage children to be the best | 0:10:00 | 0:10:03 | |
versions of themselves. | 0:10:03 | 0:10:06 | |
Hopefully we will hear from her
later. I was expecting something | 0:10:06 | 0:10:09 | |
from her. We will bring you that
sometime later. | 0:10:09 | 0:10:13 | |
There's been a number of road
accidents as snow fell on the M20 | 0:10:13 | 0:10:17 | |
motorway in Kent overnight. | 0:10:17 | 0:10:18 | |
The Met Office issued a yellow
warning for snow and ice | 0:10:18 | 0:10:21 | |
for the south-east of England. | 0:10:21 | 0:10:22 | |
Snow's also fallen over East Anglia. | 0:10:22 | 0:10:24 | |
Police are urging drivers
to take extra care. | 0:10:24 | 0:10:32 | |
We will have updates from Carol.
Listen to her later. | 0:10:34 | 0:10:46 | |
Take a look at these dramatic
pictures of a sea rescue | 0:10:46 | 0:10:49 | |
from the RNLI. | 0:10:49 | 0:10:50 | |
The woman you can see
there in the water, was perched | 0:10:50 | 0:10:53 | |
on top of a submerged car,
after she became stranded on a beach | 0:10:53 | 0:10:57 | |
on the Cumbrian coast
as the tide was coming in. | 0:10:57 | 0:10:59 | |
The woman was forced to climb
on to the top of her vehicle | 0:10:59 | 0:11:03 | |
to escape rising sea water
between Mawbray and Beckfoot. | 0:11:03 | 0:11:05 | |
She was eventually rescued
by the lifeboat and treated | 0:11:05 | 0:11:08 | |
for hypothermia. | 0:11:08 | 0:11:08 | |
The RNLI said she had
a lucky escape. | 0:11:08 | 0:11:16 | |
That is a warning to all of us if
you are messing around on a beach. | 0:11:21 | 0:11:27 | |
And don't take your car. Good point.
Did you stay up for the Super Bowl? | 0:11:27 | 0:11:41 | |
100%. That is the thing, you have to
stay up. Varies much. I am sure so | 0:11:41 | 0:11:50 | |
many have stayed up. -- there is so
much. Send us photos as well. It was | 0:11:50 | 0:11:56 | |
a great night. We love underdogs.
That is what happened! We will see | 0:11:56 | 0:12:04 | |
some of the action. Plenty of
partying in Philadelphia. | 0:12:04 | 0:12:11 | |
They beat the favourites, the New
England Patriots in a thrilling high | 0:12:11 | 0:12:17 | |
school game. Here is the touchdown
that will be shown a billion times. | 0:12:17 | 0:12:32 | |
Nick becoming the first quarterback
to throw and catch touchdowns in | 0:12:33 | 0:12:36 | |
their history. Let me hear you,
Minneapolis! And that is the | 0:12:36 | 0:12:42 | |
half-time show. It did not
disappoint. Justin Timberlake, | 0:12:42 | 0:12:50 | |
wowing the crowd from the middle.
And what a start to the Six Nations. | 0:12:50 | 0:12:56 | |
England made a great start
to their defence of the six nations | 0:12:56 | 0:12:59 | |
with a comfortable
victory over Italy. | 0:12:59 | 0:13:01 | |
They started and finished stylishly
in Rome, running in seven tries | 0:13:01 | 0:13:04 | |
for a bonus point win. | 0:13:04 | 0:13:05 | |
Sam Simmonds capped off a fine
tournament debut with two dries. | 0:13:05 | 0:13:08 | |
Forty-six points to
fifteen the final score. | 0:13:08 | 0:13:14 | |
Harry Kane got 100 three league
goals. | 0:13:14 | 0:13:17 | |
British tennis might've found
a new Davis Cup hero this weekend, | 0:13:17 | 0:13:20 | |
but world number 114
Cameron Norrie's efforts couldn't | 0:13:20 | 0:13:22 | |
prevent defeat to Spain. | 0:13:22 | 0:13:24 | |
It means Britain will now
face a play-off to keep | 0:13:24 | 0:13:26 | |
their World Group place. | 0:13:26 | 0:13:34 | |
Plenty more Super Bowl bells and
whistles later in the programme. | 0:13:40 | 0:13:43 | |
This morning I saw the half-time
adverts. There was one | 0:13:43 | 0:13:53 | |
adverts. There was one for the
Rock's new film called Skyscraper. | 0:13:55 | 0:13:56 | |
Everyone is saying it is a remake of
diehard. Everyone is saying this | 0:13:56 | 0:14:05 | |
looks a bit familiar. | 0:14:05 | 0:14:14 | |
Good morning, loads going on with
the weather. We certainly have some | 0:14:14 | 0:14:18 | |
snow in the | 0:14:18 | 0:14:19 | |
the weather. We certainly have some
snow in the forecast, some of us are | 0:14:19 | 0:14:20 | |
seen through the night and this
morning and it will stay cold, | 0:14:20 | 0:14:24 | |
looking at widespread frost and the
risk of ice on untreated surfaces. | 0:14:24 | 0:14:28 | |
Worst of that covers the forecast
for today actually! Wintry showers | 0:14:28 | 0:14:33 | |
this morning, particularly across
parts of the south-east through | 0:14:33 | 0:14:36 | |
Kent, Sussex, East Anglia and parts
of Lincolnshire. A lot of dry | 0:14:36 | 0:14:41 | |
weather around this morning. Some
clear skies here and there although | 0:14:41 | 0:14:44 | |
later on, the wintry show with
across Devon, generally speaking, a | 0:14:44 | 0:14:51 | |
lot of dry weather, cloud across
central areas and the Midlands and | 0:14:51 | 0:14:55 | |
those are those wintry showers
across Kent, Sussex, East Anglia and | 0:14:55 | 0:14:59 | |
at the east coast of England
generally, at their rush hours. | 0:14:59 | 0:15:04 | |
Further west, clear skies, cold.
Some frost, ice, and Northern | 0:15:04 | 0:15:11 | |
Ireland, in Scotland, the same,
wintry showers in the west and also | 0:15:11 | 0:15:14 | |
the east. Through the course of the
day, some of those showers will push | 0:15:14 | 0:15:19 | |
a little bit further westwards,
hitting back into the Midlands and | 0:15:19 | 0:15:23 | |
also through parts of Wales that
they will be the exception rather | 0:15:23 | 0:15:26 | |
than the rule. Most of us won't see
them and many of us will have a dry | 0:15:26 | 0:15:31 | |
day that it will still cold or
indeed very cold, depending on where | 0:15:31 | 0:15:34 | |
you are. You still have this
north-easterly wind coming. Later | 0:15:34 | 0:15:37 | |
on, the next system comes in,
introducing rain and strengthening | 0:15:37 | 0:15:42 | |
wind. As that thinks south-east
through the course of the night, it | 0:15:42 | 0:15:47 | |
engages with the cold air and you
can see what is happening, the | 0:15:47 | 0:15:51 | |
across northern Ireland, Scotland,
northern England and Wales. Tonight, | 0:15:51 | 0:15:55 | |
the risk of ice. Ahead of it, some
patchy fog forming. You can see a | 0:15:55 | 0:16:01 | |
rush of wintry showers coming across
the north and also the west. If we | 0:16:01 | 0:16:06 | |
pick up the band of rain, sleet and
snow for tomorrow, it is going to | 0:16:06 | 0:16:12 | |
continue to think Southwood getting
into the influence of getting into | 0:16:12 | 0:16:17 | |
the Midlands, fizzling as we go
through the day but tomorrow, a | 0:16:17 | 0:16:20 | |
winter in its anywhere in terms of
showers. In between, dry and bright | 0:16:20 | 0:16:26 | |
but look at those temperatures,
those are the maximum is! | 0:16:26 | 0:16:35 | |
those are the maximum is! --
maximums. Turning colder, it then | 0:16:35 | 0:16:41 | |
rejuvenates, the we will see a
period of snow coming south in | 0:16:41 | 0:16:44 | |
through parts of the south-east
during the course of Tuesday | 0:16:44 | 0:16:47 | |
evening. Again, East Anglia towards
the south-east. But in the course of | 0:16:47 | 0:16:52 | |
Wednesday will continue to edge away
from the south-east, a ridge of high | 0:16:52 | 0:16:57 | |
pressure comes in, then we have the
next system coming our way, bringing | 0:16:57 | 0:17:01 | |
more unsettled conditions. We start
seeing the back end of the first | 0:17:01 | 0:17:06 | |
front, under that bridge and other
cold day, and then this one to | 0:17:06 | 0:17:10 | |
indent with soap comes to content
with. -- so keeps the content with. | 0:17:10 | 0:17:20 | |
Let's take a look at what is
making the headlines | 0:17:20 | 0:17:22 | |
in this morning's papers. | 0:17:22 | 0:17:26 | |
The Times, a secret plan to end Tory
turmoil. The Customs deal could | 0:17:26 | 0:17:32 | |
split customs and drove. A picture
of the Queen, looking, we cannot | 0:17:32 | 0:17:38 | |
talk about the weather there but
when the sun as she walked the | 0:17:38 | 0:17:43 | |
church near Sandringham, excepting
flowers from well-wishers. The front | 0:17:43 | 0:17:46 | |
page of the mirror, we told you that
some of the papers picked up this | 0:17:46 | 0:17:50 | |
story, the coldest week of winter
and Carol has details throughout the | 0:17:50 | 0:17:53 | |
morning. The Daily Telegraph I'm
sure we have mentioned this already, | 0:17:53 | 0:18:02 | |
bitcoin, Lloyds bank in bitcoin
crackdown. This is a Facebook chief | 0:18:05 | 0:18:10 | |
who says she has incurable cancer,
she is the head of Facebook in | 0:18:10 | 0:18:17 | |
Europe, disclosing yesterday she has
an incurable form of cancer and lots | 0:18:17 | 0:18:22 | |
of people talking about her. Front
page of the Daily Mail, men are | 0:18:22 | 0:18:26 | |
still dying of embarrassment,
prostate cancer, they said, because | 0:18:26 | 0:18:31 | |
they are too embarrassed to visit
the doctor is part of their | 0:18:31 | 0:18:34 | |
campaign. Their exclusive interview
they say, Tamil Anderson, -- | 0:18:34 | 0:18:42 | |
Pamela,. Have you done the sun? No,
the Queen 's swans. Apparently. They | 0:18:42 | 0:18:48 | |
have bird flu. | 0:18:48 | 0:18:53 | |
have bird flu. I thought they were
killed by swans. Anyway. I'd hastily | 0:18:55 | 0:19:01 | |
reverse, your Majesty. Interesting
industry that is doing well in | 0:19:01 | 0:19:08 | |
Britain is the film industry, the
film studio industry, so the | 0:19:08 | 0:19:13 | |
Guardian is saying this morning that
at the minutes, the amount spent on | 0:19:13 | 0:19:16 | |
TV production rose 10% last year
which means they are having to find | 0:19:16 | 0:19:21 | |
other sites across the UK so
Pinewood isn't big enough anymore so | 0:19:21 | 0:19:24 | |
maybe the made in Day Zero site the
studio behind James Bond and Star | 0:19:24 | 0:19:31 | |
Wars are looking at buying the site
in its London -- Dagenham. It shows | 0:19:31 | 0:19:35 | |
it is a successful export to the UK.
And the is in the kitchen, the | 0:19:35 | 0:19:40 | |
growth in fully specced kitchens in
workplaces. It is a nightmare in the | 0:19:40 | 0:19:49 | |
office as it is with your fridge and
your sandwiches and your name on | 0:19:49 | 0:19:54 | |
them and imagining having
ingredients for everything. I would | 0:19:54 | 0:19:56 | |
be worried about some people may not
bring their washing up. That is an | 0:19:56 | 0:20:00 | |
issue anyway. What are you talking
about? I will not name names. We | 0:20:00 | 0:20:07 | |
don't even have posters at the BBC!
Or a microwave! -- toasters. Health | 0:20:07 | 0:20:16 | |
and safety. Go and work for a trendy
start-up and they will have | 0:20:16 | 0:20:20 | |
everything you need. Woks, the lot.
Is that the full level of cooking | 0:20:20 | 0:20:26 | |
for you? They even have a wok!. I
never written into my contract. I | 0:20:26 | 0:20:34 | |
demand a wok! As you can imagine,
dominated by two stories today, the | 0:20:34 | 0:20:45 | |
rugby, but of course what a great
start for some, Sam's debut, two | 0:20:45 | 0:20:53 | |
tries, the other story dominating
the back pages is Liverpool and | 0:20:53 | 0:20:57 | |
Tottenham, they have had everything
that much but a bit of controversy | 0:20:57 | 0:21:01 | |
at the end of the game if you kept
watching right to the end, Jurgen | 0:21:01 | 0:21:05 | |
Klopp had to physically restrain
some of his players who were not too | 0:21:05 | 0:21:08 | |
happy with some of the decisions
that led to a Harry ane goal. -- | 0:21:08 | 0:21:16 | |
Harry Kane. The accused him of
diving for the penalty. It puts a | 0:21:16 | 0:21:23 | |
spin on his 100th goal, doesn't it?
It was the challenge that football | 0:21:23 | 0:21:28 | |
fans said they never touched it?
Talking about technology and how it | 0:21:28 | 0:21:33 | |
makes a difference to our lives a
lot here on Breakfast, I like this, | 0:21:33 | 0:21:36 | |
it is a survey basically looking at
what we miss about technology being | 0:21:36 | 0:21:41 | |
new and making mix tapes is number
one. I loved those. Putting photos | 0:21:41 | 0:21:46 | |
into albums. I still do that! I'd
love a photo album! Metre, I just | 0:21:46 | 0:21:52 | |
don't do it! I love that. I don't do
it! You can do a playlist on your | 0:21:52 | 0:22:00 | |
Spotify. It isn't the same! It is
something special about hitting play | 0:22:00 | 0:22:04 | |
and record on the radio and making a
mix tape. Recording films and TV | 0:22:04 | 0:22:12 | |
shows on videotape. Do you remember
that? Having printed photos around | 0:22:12 | 0:22:16 | |
the house, handwritten letters,
buying CDs, love letters. Tell us | 0:22:16 | 0:22:21 | |
what you think. To superquick ones,
Tattler magazine, society bible, one | 0:22:21 | 0:22:30 | |
thing you cannot talk about
according to convention at a dinner | 0:22:30 | 0:22:33 | |
party is? Anyone? It isn't... Wrecks
it! Brexit. And how do you feel | 0:22:33 | 0:22:48 | |
about question mark they are getting
smaller. I'd... How would you feel | 0:22:48 | 0:22:55 | |
about pets? Look at it. Yum or yuck?
This has been created by a bit of a | 0:22:55 | 0:23:07 | |
fan, 2200 calorie do we preach they
call it. It is a terrible slant | 0:23:07 | 0:23:12 | |
-based topped with ice cream, or
caramel, the tallow, and then | 0:23:12 | 0:23:18 | |
shadings of creme eggs and a creme
egg in the middle. -- Nutella. Sean | 0:23:18 | 0:23:24 | |
is concerned about the calorie
content. You put it in a wok and it | 0:23:24 | 0:23:30 | |
will be fine. See you later. It is
6:23 AM. | 0:23:30 | 0:23:34 | |
Home to Table Mountain,
Cape Town is one of the world's most | 0:23:34 | 0:23:38 | |
iconic tourist destinations. | 0:23:38 | 0:23:39 | |
It also could become known
for being the first major city | 0:23:39 | 0:23:42 | |
in the world to run out of water. | 0:23:42 | 0:23:44 | |
After three years of very low
rainfall and a growing population, | 0:23:44 | 0:23:47 | |
it's facing its worst
drought in memory. | 0:23:47 | 0:23:49 | |
Day Zero - the 16th of April,
the date taps are due to run dry - | 0:23:49 | 0:23:53 | |
is in 70 days. | 0:23:53 | 0:23:54 | |
Residents have been told to use less
than 50 litres per day. | 0:23:54 | 0:23:57 | |
To put that into context,
a typical bath tub holds 80 litres. | 0:23:57 | 0:24:01 | |
Bridgetti Lim Banda has
set up a crisis group. | 0:24:01 | 0:24:03 | |
She joins us now from Cape Town. | 0:24:03 | 0:24:10 | |
Good morning, thanks adjoining
house. Tell us, how have you been | 0:24:10 | 0:24:16 | |
coping with these restrictions so
far you have had on water? Morning. | 0:24:16 | 0:24:20 | |
It is difficult, | 0:24:20 | 0:24:22 | |
far you have had on water? Morning.
It is difficult, that is no light, | 0:24:22 | 0:24:24 | |
it is completely difficult, a
different lifestyle than what we | 0:24:24 | 0:24:28 | |
have had, you have had to restrict
your showers to 90 seconds, that I | 0:24:28 | 0:24:32 | |
do is I watched the base in three
days a week and on the fourth day I | 0:24:32 | 0:24:38 | |
will have a shower when I wash my
hair is that becomes a big event is | 0:24:38 | 0:24:42 | |
now in my life. The full wash in the
basin. Tell us about Day Zero | 0:24:42 | 0:24:46 | |
because by those days they are
planning to turn off is what happens | 0:24:46 | 0:24:50 | |
then? Well, de zero, the day they
turned the, it isn't really a day in | 0:24:50 | 0:24:59 | |
particular -- Day Zero. It will
happen naturally as they lower the | 0:24:59 | 0:25:02 | |
pressure in the pipes. What effect
will happen is the water will be off | 0:25:02 | 0:25:07 | |
for all of the suburbs and it means
that we would have to up for 25 | 0:25:07 | 0:25:14 | |
litres of water per person per day
so we are 50 litres at the moment | 0:25:14 | 0:25:20 | |
and it will be almost impossible on
that amount. That could go on for a | 0:25:20 | 0:25:25 | |
period of at least three months, it
could be longer, we have no idea. | 0:25:25 | 0:25:29 | |
But we will need to prepare for that
level in approximately three months. | 0:25:29 | 0:25:34 | |
How worried are you buy it? It must
be very concerning. It is very | 0:25:34 | 0:25:41 | |
concerning because there are so many
uncertainties. The local government | 0:25:41 | 0:25:44 | |
hasn't been very forthcoming with
plans and preparation for example, | 0:25:44 | 0:25:49 | |
it's one thing that a lot of people
are starting to become concerned | 0:25:49 | 0:25:53 | |
about now, storage. Our storage
system is now starting to back up | 0:25:53 | 0:26:00 | |
because we are putting less and less
water into it and you can imagine | 0:26:00 | 0:26:04 | |
what will happen when we go down to
25 litres. | 0:26:04 | 0:26:12 | |
25 litres. So, we need to make other
plans a sewerage. Tell us, you seem | 0:26:12 | 0:26:16 | |
to be by a pool. Is that still have
water in it? Can you use that? It is | 0:26:16 | 0:26:22 | |
half full. At the moment. Presumably
you would not be able to do it. | 0:26:22 | 0:26:30 | |
Argue able to use the pool water for
other things? -- argue able? We have | 0:26:30 | 0:26:37 | |
lost her. It seems extraordinary
that they will do that. They will | 0:26:37 | 0:26:42 | |
turn off the taps on that day zero
and then people will have to survive | 0:26:42 | 0:26:47 | |
off 25 litres. It is interesting, a
50 litre limit at the moment and | 0:26:47 | 0:26:51 | |
shower is 62, isn't it? If you brush
your teeth and leave a tap on it is | 0:26:51 | 0:26:56 | |
nine litres. It is really... They
will have to go and collect water | 0:26:56 | 0:27:01 | |
from the street, are they, as well?
It makes you think about when you | 0:27:01 | 0:27:05 | |
are brushing your teeth, I make sure
to turn the tap off now. Thank you | 0:27:05 | 0:27:10 | |
for watching us, right now let's get
the news, travel and weather where | 0:27:10 | 0:27:13 | |
you are. | 0:27:13 | 0:30:33 | |
a default on widespread frost. | 0:30:33 | 0:30:34 | |
I'm back with the latest
from the BBC London newsroom | 0:30:34 | 0:30:36 | |
in half an hour. | 0:30:36 | 0:30:37 | |
Plenty more on our website
at the usual address. | 0:30:37 | 0:30:40 | |
Now, though, it's back
to Dan and Louise. | 0:30:40 | 0:30:42 | |
Bye for now. | 0:30:42 | 0:30:43 | |
Hello. | 0:30:45 | 0:30:46 | |
This is Breakfast, with Dan Walker
and Louise Minchin. | 0:30:46 | 0:30:48 | |
We'll bring you the latest news
and sport in a moment. | 0:30:48 | 0:30:51 | |
Here's what's coming up: | 0:30:51 | 0:30:52 | |
The TV presenter and Radio two DJ,
Zoe Ball, will be on the sofa | 0:30:52 | 0:30:56 | |
to tell us why she's getting
on her bike for a cycling challenge. | 0:30:56 | 0:31:02 | |
Are you planning to
call in sick today? | 0:31:02 | 0:31:04 | |
If you are, you won't be alone. | 0:31:04 | 0:31:06 | |
It is estimated that around
350,000 will do just that. | 0:31:06 | 0:31:14 | |
We'll explore how that impacts
employers and the economy. | 0:31:14 | 0:31:19 | |
I think this is my first oyster. It
will not be your last, there are | 0:31:19 | 0:31:26 | |
quite a few over there. | 0:31:26 | 0:31:30 | |
Find out how the Ellis family got
on when they sampled oysters as part | 0:31:30 | 0:31:34 | |
of their time-travelling adventure
around the kitchen table | 0:31:34 | 0:31:36 | |
to experience what life
was like for working-class families | 0:31:36 | 0:31:38 | |
over the past 100 years. | 0:31:38 | 0:31:40 | |
That was tripe, by the way. Good
morning. | 0:31:40 | 0:31:42 | |
Here's a summary of today's main
stories from BBC News. | 0:31:42 | 0:31:45 | |
The EU's Chief Negotiator,
Michel Barnier, will be | 0:31:45 | 0:31:47 | |
in Downing Street today for talks
about a possible transitional period | 0:31:47 | 0:31:50 | |
after Britain leaves the EU. | 0:31:50 | 0:31:51 | |
He'll meet the Brexit Secretary
David Davis in the first of a series | 0:31:51 | 0:31:55 | |
of discussions this week. | 0:31:55 | 0:31:56 | |
It comes after the Government
indicated it remains determined | 0:31:56 | 0:31:58 | |
to leave the European Customs Union
when Brexit takes place next year. | 0:31:58 | 0:32:02 | |
A new ring-fenced tax to fund
the NHS and social care in England | 0:32:02 | 0:32:05 | |
has been proposed by
a panel of health experts. | 0:32:05 | 0:32:07 | |
The panel, set up by
the Liberal Democrats, | 0:32:07 | 0:32:09 | |
says the NHS in England should be
given an extra four billion pounds. | 0:32:09 | 0:32:12 | |
The government says it prioritsed
NHS funding at the last Budget, | 0:32:12 | 0:32:15 | |
providing two billion
pounds for social care. | 0:32:15 | 0:32:23 | |
Customers of the Lloyds Banking
group have been banned | 0:32:27 | 0:32:29 | |
from using their credit cards to buy
virtual currencies such as Bitcoin. | 0:32:29 | 0:32:32 | |
The decision affects all account
holders with Lloyds Bank, | 0:32:32 | 0:32:35 | |
Bank of Scotland, Halifax and MBNA. | 0:32:35 | 0:32:36 | |
The group says it's protecting
customers from running up debts | 0:32:36 | 0:32:39 | |
they could never repay. | 0:32:39 | 0:32:46 | |
The sole surviving suspect behind
the Paris terror attacks in 2015 | 0:32:46 | 0:32:49 | |
will go on trial in Belgium today. | 0:32:49 | 0:32:51 | |
Salah Abdeslam faces charges
relating to a shootout he had | 0:32:51 | 0:32:53 | |
with police while on the run
in Belgium in 2016. | 0:32:53 | 0:32:56 | |
He faces a second trial relating
to his involvement in the Paris | 0:32:56 | 0:32:59 | |
attacks at a later date. | 0:32:59 | 0:33:07 | |
It could be one of the coldest weeks
of the year. Snowy has led to a | 0:33:14 | 0:33:19 | |
serious accident in Kent this
morning already. This was taken by | 0:33:19 | 0:33:25 | |
police on the M20. No one has been
seriously injured and the motorway | 0:33:25 | 0:33:30 | |
has been cleared. | 0:33:30 | 0:33:36 | |
has been cleared. There are yellow
warnings for ice on many highways. | 0:33:37 | 0:33:43 | |
Mothers are being hit by a long-term
pay penalty if they work part-time | 0:33:43 | 0:33:46 | |
while looking after children,
according to a new study. | 0:33:46 | 0:33:49 | |
By the time their first child
reaches the age of 20, | 0:33:49 | 0:33:52 | |
mothers earn around 30% less
than similarly educated fathers, | 0:33:52 | 0:33:54 | |
because they don't benefit
from pay rises associated | 0:33:54 | 0:33:57 | |
with having more experience. | 0:33:57 | 0:34:04 | |
A new mental health campaign
to encourage children "to be | 0:34:15 | 0:34:18 | |
comfortable in their own
skin" is being supported | 0:34:18 | 0:34:20 | |
by The Duchess of Cambridge. | 0:34:20 | 0:34:21 | |
Her Royal Highness, Kate Middleton
is pregnant with her third child | 0:34:21 | 0:34:24 | |
and says adults should help
encourage children to be the best | 0:34:24 | 0:34:27 | |
versions of themselves. | 0:34:27 | 0:34:28 | |
Again, we will bring you that later
on. OK? That is twice we have missed | 0:34:28 | 0:34:32 | |
it. | 0:34:32 | 0:34:34 | |
The Super Bowl. It comes around
faster every year. It surprised me. | 0:34:34 | 0:34:39 | |
I know it is this time, but it snuck
up on me. I have to be honest, many | 0:34:39 | 0:34:47 | |
people will have no idea what is
going on. It is such a spectacle. | 0:34:47 | 0:34:53 | |
Some people were talking about how
it was a great try. But, no, it is a | 0:34:53 | 0:35:01 | |
touchdown. Many people will have
stayed up all night and watched it | 0:35:01 | 0:35:06 | |
all year. Some brilliant pictures of
people having | 0:35:06 | 0:35:13 | |
people having Super Bowl parties,
with chips, chip bowls... I don't | 0:35:26 | 0:35:28 | |
know if that is what it is called.
Imagine if it was Saturday night! We | 0:35:28 | 0:35:32 | |
can all watch it! I don't think they
will just listen to you. I will | 0:35:32 | 0:35:37 | |
write them a strong e-mail. | 0:35:37 | 0:35:50 | |
write them a strong e-mail. The
Philadelphia Eagles won for the | 0:35:51 | 0:35:53 | |
first time, beating the favourites
and defending champions, the New | 0:35:53 | 0:35:55 | |
England Patriots. This touchdown
will be shown a billion times. | 0:35:55 | 0:36:03 | |
will be shown a billion times. Nick
Foles, the first quarterback to | 0:36:06 | 0:36:07 | |
throw and catch touchdowns in Super
Bowl history. | 0:36:07 | 0:36:10 | |
He only came into the side
towards the end of the season | 0:36:10 | 0:36:13 | |
as an injury replacement. | 0:36:13 | 0:36:14 | |
Time stops. I get to celebrate this
with my wife and daughter. She has | 0:36:14 | 0:36:21 | |
been there through everything, so
has my family. To celebrate this | 0:36:21 | 0:36:27 | |
moment, that is what it is about. I
am just grateful, you know? | 0:36:27 | 0:36:33 | |
Let me hear you, Minneapolis! | 0:36:33 | 0:36:37 | |
And as always the half time show
didn't fail to disappoint, | 0:36:37 | 0:36:40 | |
as Justin Timberlake
wowed the crowds. | 0:36:40 | 0:36:42 | |
A 12 minute performance that
included a tribute to Prince. That | 0:36:42 | 0:36:52 | |
13-year-old boy could be the most
popular person at his school today, | 0:36:52 | 0:37:00 | |
getting a selfie with the star as
well. | 0:37:00 | 0:37:02 | |
In the women's Six Nations,
England put in a huge second | 0:37:02 | 0:37:05 | |
performance to beat Italy
42 points to seven. | 0:37:05 | 0:37:08 | |
England Captain Sarah Hunter went
over for a hat-trick of tries | 0:37:08 | 0:37:11 | |
helping her team secure
the bonus point. | 0:37:11 | 0:37:18 | |
These are some of the tries. | 0:37:20 | 0:37:28 | |
When you have that, who needs the
Super Bowl? We look forward to it | 0:38:18 | 0:38:25 | |
all year. Sometimes the opening
weekend can be lacklustre, but that | 0:38:25 | 0:38:28 | |
was awesome. Disappointing for
Scotland. Such high hopes. Just | 0:38:28 | 0:38:34 | |
blown away by Wales. The first ten
minutes, I don't know about you, but | 0:38:34 | 0:38:40 | |
I had so much hope with all the
momentum. It is just so | 0:38:40 | 0:38:44 | |
disappointing for them yet again to
fall upon the sword of Wales. They | 0:38:44 | 0:38:50 | |
just took those chances. There were
so many of them. That is what it | 0:38:50 | 0:38:55 | |
comes down to. Still, plenty more.
We will see. Plenty more in the | 0:38:55 | 0:39:03 | |
tournament to come. I made my
children sit down and watch it. I | 0:39:03 | 0:39:09 | |
wanted them to appreciate it. Did it
work? They all walked off two | 0:39:09 | 0:39:15 | |
minutes before Jonny Sexton...
Towards the end? The beautiful drop | 0:39:15 | 0:39:22 | |
goal. It was incredible. As in
Ireland send... They did well! It | 0:39:22 | 0:39:30 | |
lasted ten minute. -- As an Ireland
fan. I am not joking, I nearly fell | 0:39:30 | 0:39:39 | |
off the sofa in the last ten
minutes. It was just incredible. | 0:39:39 | 0:39:46 | |
Jonny Sexton, getting all of the
points for Ireland. A great start. | 0:39:46 | 0:39:54 | |
Ireland and Italy next week. Then
England and Wales at Twickenham. | 0:39:56 | 0:40:00 | |
In the women's Six Nations,
England put in a huge second | 0:40:00 | 0:40:02 | |
performance to beat Italy
42 points to seven. | 0:40:02 | 0:40:05 | |
England Captain Sarah Hunter went
over for a hat-trick of tries | 0:40:05 | 0:40:08 | |
helping her team secure
the bonus point. | 0:40:08 | 0:40:10 | |
An absolutely amazing game
at Anfield yesterday then. | 0:40:10 | 0:40:13 | |
Two injury time goals,
two Spurs penalties: one offside | 0:40:13 | 0:40:15 | |
and missed, and the second,
Harry Kane's 100th Premier League | 0:40:15 | 0:40:18 | |
goal. | 0:40:18 | 0:40:25 | |
And before all of that came one
of the goals of the season. | 0:40:25 | 0:40:29 | |
Substitute Victory Wanyama smashing
home an equaliser with ten | 0:40:29 | 0:40:31 | |
minutes to go. | 0:40:31 | 0:40:32 | |
That cancelled out Mo Salah's
earlier stirke, only | 0:40:32 | 0:40:34 | |
for the Egyptian to wriggle
through and score this brilliant | 0:40:34 | 0:40:37 | |
goal at the end. | 0:40:37 | 0:40:42 | |
But there was still time
for a second Spurs penalty. | 0:40:42 | 0:40:45 | |
Kane had one saved a few minutes
before, but with the last kick | 0:40:45 | 0:40:48 | |
of the game he made it 100 not out! | 0:40:48 | 0:40:51 | |
A breathless and
controversial 2-2 draw. | 0:40:51 | 0:40:59 | |
Crystal Palace came from behind to
draw 1-1. It moves them up to 14. | 0:41:03 | 0:41:13 | |
Newcastle are at 16th. So much sport
and so much controversy. We need to | 0:41:13 | 0:41:24 | |
give you more time. | 0:41:24 | 0:41:31 | |
There are calls to look at the
future of health and social care in | 0:41:32 | 0:41:39 | |
England. With pressures on the
health service is increasing, they | 0:41:39 | 0:41:42 | |
say a levy is the only way to
guarantee the long-term future of | 0:41:42 | 0:41:45 | |
the NHS. We have the former chair of
the Royal College of GPs with us, | 0:41:45 | 0:41:50 | |
and she joins us now. Give us more
detail. First, explained the | 0:41:50 | 0:42:03 | |
ringfence tax. -- explain. The NHS
is funded through general taxation. | 0:42:04 | 0:42:12 | |
The problem we have is we go from
feast to famine. It follows a | 0:42:12 | 0:42:18 | |
political cycle. Before elections,
we get offered lots of freebies. And | 0:42:18 | 0:42:24 | |
now there is serious strain on the
NHS to be we looked at the evidence | 0:42:24 | 0:42:29 | |
and it appeared the best solution
was to put | 0:42:29 | 0:42:36 | |
was to put together a ringfence tax,
like the BBC TV licence. It would be | 0:42:39 | 0:42:43 | |
fuelled by general taxation, ideally
through an increased taxation for | 0:42:43 | 0:42:47 | |
the immediate crisis, but also
through reform of national | 0:42:47 | 0:42:49 | |
insurance. I did not know when I
started on this committee when I | 0:42:49 | 0:42:55 | |
reached the age of 60 I would pay
reduced contributions even though I | 0:42:55 | 0:43:00 | |
am working, and over 65, I would pay
nothing. Money could be raised by a | 0:43:00 | 0:43:09 | |
reform of the national insurance.
This would create the hypothecation. | 0:43:09 | 0:43:16 | |
We can see some pictures of
demonstrations in London with | 0:43:16 | 0:43:19 | |
thousands demonstrating for
increased funding for the NHS. Do | 0:43:19 | 0:43:24 | |
you feel the public support for the
change exists? It does. You could | 0:43:24 | 0:43:30 | |
see on your pay slip how much was
going to the NHS social care tax. It | 0:43:30 | 0:43:35 | |
is much more transparent. If there
is not enough money in this bucket, | 0:43:35 | 0:43:40 | |
fund, then the public would know
this. This would be coming back to | 0:43:40 | 0:43:44 | |
the BBC. If there is not enough
money to pay for new productions, we | 0:43:44 | 0:43:49 | |
can have that debate. At the moment,
it all seems so murky. We have been | 0:43:49 | 0:43:55 | |
told the NHS has more money than it
ever required. Then we are told that | 0:43:55 | 0:44:01 | |
has not got enough money. Is on me
as a GP, it sometimes makes no | 0:44:01 | 0:44:05 | |
sense. -- even me as a GP. To even
debate should we be investing in | 0:44:05 | 0:44:14 | |
expensive cancer treatment if there
is not enough money, it is something | 0:44:14 | 0:44:17 | |
we as the public can begin to look
at and to understand in a much | 0:44:17 | 0:44:22 | |
better way. I know money is the main
focus, but did you think that, as | 0:44:22 | 0:44:27 | |
members of the public, we need to
perhaps change perceptions of the | 0:44:27 | 0:44:32 | |
NHS perhaps expectations as well.
Use them more sparingly? | 0:44:32 | 0:44:39 | |
I have reached this age not blaming
people, when you are unwell, when we | 0:44:39 | 0:44:46 | |
as a GP think it is to deal, I think
people take the NHS for granted and | 0:44:46 | 0:44:51 | |
I think in particular those of my
age who have never known anything | 0:44:51 | 0:44:55 | |
else, I think we do overuse it so
some respect, but actually the NHS | 0:44:55 | 0:45:01 | |
doesn't have enough money. Under the
government has put more money in | 0:45:01 | 0:45:05 | |
year but with health inflation
rising at about 4% per year may be | 0:45:05 | 0:45:10 | |
because of clever scientist creating
new treatment, we are living longer | 0:45:10 | 0:45:15 | |
and healthier, our expectations are
increasing, so I think it is | 0:45:15 | 0:45:20 | |
important that we understand the NHS
is in the wasteful service, it | 0:45:20 | 0:45:25 | |
creates a healthy population and
continues to do so but if we want it | 0:45:25 | 0:45:29 | |
we have to fund it and if we don't
want it, that is a decision we | 0:45:29 | 0:45:33 | |
should make the population and this
new form of taxation, the ring-fence | 0:45:33 | 0:45:37 | |
will make it a lot easier. Thank you
so much for your time this morning, | 0:45:37 | 0:45:41 | |
good to speak to you. I'm sure this
will be greatly discussed by our | 0:45:41 | 0:45:46 | |
viewers. One other thing, we would
love to get your comments, the | 0:45:46 | 0:45:49 | |
government said it would double the
immigration health surcharge which | 0:45:49 | 0:45:53 | |
is that has raised 220 million
pounds, this is what the temporary | 0:45:53 | 0:45:58 | |
migrants pay when they come to the
UK, it is £400 now, that will bring | 0:45:58 | 0:46:03 | |
in some more money. I'm sure lots of
you want to talk about which you | 0:46:03 | 0:46:07 | |
like to have this idea, this
particular, it would be noted on | 0:46:07 | 0:46:11 | |
your pay slip, how much is going to
the NHS. Would you like that? What | 0:46:11 | 0:46:15 | |
do you think is the mark contact us.
-- what do you think? I was trying | 0:46:15 | 0:46:25 | |
to get it on the screen. I don't
have all of the power, yet! Talking | 0:46:25 | 0:46:31 | |
about the weather this morning
because there are yellow weather | 0:46:31 | 0:46:34 | |
warning of snow and ice for large
parts of the country. Particularly I | 0:46:34 | 0:46:38 | |
think in south Wales and south-east
England? Carol? If people are going | 0:46:38 | 0:46:43 | |
on the roads this morning, | 0:46:43 | 0:46:44 | |
England? Carol? If people are going
on the roads this morning, plenty to | 0:46:44 | 0:46:45 | |
think about. Absolutely, good
morning, some snow around, it has | 0:46:45 | 0:46:50 | |
been falling overnight across Kent,
Essex, East Anglia, Sussex for | 0:46:50 | 0:46:55 | |
example and also some snow across
eastern England. And with low | 0:46:55 | 0:46:59 | |
temperatures, the temperature fell
to -5.7 in Kingsbridge in Northern | 0:46:59 | 0:47:03 | |
Ireland, widespread frost and the
risk of ice and this week too all of | 0:47:03 | 0:47:07 | |
its still in the forecast and it
will remain cold. This morning you | 0:47:07 | 0:47:11 | |
can see where we have the snow
showers, some across Scotland and | 0:47:11 | 0:47:15 | |
northern Ireland but not so many,
drifting further west we have some | 0:47:15 | 0:47:19 | |
clear skies. It is cold, a risk of
ice, frost. In the Midlands towards | 0:47:19 | 0:47:24 | |
the south a wee bit more cloud but
those temperatures at ATM, look at | 0:47:24 | 0:47:28 | |
those. Still freezing or below. The
snow across the south-east will blow | 0:47:28 | 0:47:34 | |
a little by the west, through the
course of the day, though showers at | 0:47:34 | 0:47:38 | |
the east coast of England but there
are showers rather than a band of | 0:47:38 | 0:47:42 | |
snow is so we're not all seeing
them. One or two across Northern | 0:47:42 | 0:47:45 | |
Ireland, as you could across
Scotland, but for most of us the | 0:47:45 | 0:47:49 | |
picture this morning is dry and
cold. We will also see wintry as | 0:47:49 | 0:47:53 | |
develop across parts of the
south-west of England with a slight | 0:47:53 | 0:47:57 | |
show as to the Midlands and into
parts of Wales but for most, dry, | 0:47:57 | 0:48:03 | |
bright, and some sunshine. We are
hanging onto the key north-easterly | 0:48:03 | 0:48:08 | |
wind so wherever you are it will
feel cold but these temperatures, no | 0:48:08 | 0:48:12 | |
great shakes. Later the winds will
pick up across the north-west | 0:48:12 | 0:48:15 | |
heralding the arrival of the next
weather front which initially will | 0:48:15 | 0:48:19 | |
bring in some rain to go through
this evening what you will find it | 0:48:19 | 0:48:23 | |
with the cold air and probably a
mixture of sleet and snow readily | 0:48:23 | 0:48:27 | |
falling across Scotland, Northern
Ireland, northern England and also | 0:48:27 | 0:48:30 | |
eventually into Wales. Ahead of it,
cold, the rest of us, some patchy | 0:48:30 | 0:48:35 | |
fog and behind it, cold with the
risk of ice and wintry showers. We | 0:48:35 | 0:48:39 | |
start off tomorrow with the weather
front continuing its defence south | 0:48:39 | 0:48:43 | |
eastwards. Bringing snow with it as
it does so. It will tend to fizzle | 0:48:43 | 0:48:48 | |
as we go through the course of the
morning, becoming more of a band of | 0:48:48 | 0:48:52 | |
cloud, maybe some sleep, but behind
it still cold, still wintry showers, | 0:48:52 | 0:48:57 | |
some sunshine and cloud building
ahead of it but we aren't done with | 0:48:57 | 0:49:01 | |
it yet on Tuesday because as
temperatures dropped and we head | 0:49:01 | 0:49:04 | |
into the evening this weather front
will actually reinvigorate so as we | 0:49:04 | 0:49:07 | |
go through the night time we will
have a mixture of rain, sleet and | 0:49:07 | 0:49:11 | |
snow, maybe some thunder and
lightning. This continues to push | 0:49:11 | 0:49:15 | |
down into the south-east and also
East Anglia so if you are | 0:49:15 | 0:49:18 | |
travelling, are that in mind. --
bear that. Average of high pressure | 0:49:18 | 0:49:28 | |
settle things down and then the next
system comes, dry weather although | 0:49:28 | 0:49:31 | |
it will still be cold. On the
leading edge of the front you can | 0:49:31 | 0:49:35 | |
see some snow. In comes the rain and
behind it, some snow and the risk of | 0:49:35 | 0:49:40 | |
ice. There is so much going on with
the weather forecast this week and | 0:49:40 | 0:49:44 | |
we are | 0:49:44 | 0:49:45 | |
the weather forecast this week and
we are only two Wednesday! It will | 0:49:45 | 0:49:47 | |
be pretty traumatic, thank you, we
will teach in touch. Jacinta Carroll | 0:49:47 | 0:49:53 | |
through the morning for the latest
updates and worth checking the BBC | 0:49:53 | 0:49:57 | |
website. -- do stay in touch with
carols. Sean is with us once again. | 0:49:57 | 0:50:09 | |
Housing, infrastructure, can we
build them? Good morning. If you | 0:50:09 | 0:50:14 | |
work in construction there could be
a big demand to your skills in the | 0:50:14 | 0:50:18 | |
coming years with the construction
industry training board reckoning | 0:50:18 | 0:50:20 | |
150,000 jobs would need to be filled
over the next few years, 15,000 | 0:50:20 | 0:50:27 | |
carpenters, 10,000 labourers, and
more but the crucial question, other | 0:50:27 | 0:50:30 | |
rough people with the right skills
to build those homes and | 0:50:30 | 0:50:35 | |
infrastructure that we need. Let's
talk to Stephen Bradley. 150,000 | 0:50:35 | 0:50:42 | |
workers are needed, either in the
pipeline? The thing is we have a | 0:50:42 | 0:50:47 | |
good opportunity to plan ahead and
we know we have big projects coming | 0:50:47 | 0:50:50 | |
up such as high-speed through,
nuclear build, so the plants in | 0:50:50 | 0:50:56 | |
Wales, and also be a thing the
government 's ambitions for more | 0:50:56 | 0:51:00 | |
home buildings which gives us the
opportunity to plan ahead and what | 0:51:00 | 0:51:04 | |
we are seeing is a range of roles
being created, some of the more | 0:51:04 | 0:51:08 | |
traditional he would proceed with
construction like bricklayers, | 0:51:08 | 0:51:12 | |
carpenters, plasterers, painters,
but also a lot of roles for civil | 0:51:12 | 0:51:17 | |
engineers, surveyors, project
managers and increasingly as the | 0:51:17 | 0:51:19 | |
industry modernises, modelling
projects, analysing data. So if do | 0:51:19 | 0:51:28 | |
-- is there a skills shortage? They
are reporting their ears but I think | 0:51:28 | 0:51:33 | |
it is more about the fact that we
have a few years to plan ahead, we | 0:51:33 | 0:51:37 | |
can start investing in more
apprenticeships, working with | 0:51:37 | 0:51:39 | |
schools to alert people to the
opportunities and providing more | 0:51:39 | 0:51:42 | |
work experience. The industry think,
150,000 jobs created, will they be | 0:51:42 | 0:51:49 | |
filled all will be looking at a
point where we actually don't have | 0:51:49 | 0:51:52 | |
the workers to build the houses?
There is always that pressure, if we | 0:51:52 | 0:51:56 | |
see more confidence from the
industry that some of the targets | 0:51:56 | 0:52:00 | |
will be met such as the housing
ambition, more of the small | 0:52:00 | 0:52:03 | |
employers they do the work will have
the confidence to invest in the | 0:52:03 | 0:52:07 | |
skills. I think we can take some
confidence from the fact that we | 0:52:07 | 0:52:11 | |
have had a lot of success with
placing apprenticeships are lost | 0:52:11 | 0:52:13 | |
their jobs because of the collapse
of Carillion, that was obviously a | 0:52:13 | 0:52:17 | |
sad event but what we have seen is
more than half of these vacancies | 0:52:17 | 0:52:20 | |
have already been filled, there are
lots of interviews coming on the | 0:52:20 | 0:52:24 | |
industry is stepping up and have an
appetite to invest in | 0:52:24 | 0:52:27 | |
apprenticeships and I think it gives
you a cause for confidence. It is | 0:52:27 | 0:52:31 | |
good for apprentices at Carillion
but some reports out this morning | 0:52:31 | 0:52:34 | |
about Carillion saying there will be
wider consequences and you may see | 0:52:34 | 0:52:37 | |
or smaller construction firms going
bust because of the contracts they | 0:52:37 | 0:52:41 | |
had with Carillion themselves. Are
you seeing a bit of that? There is a | 0:52:41 | 0:52:46 | |
concern with that because the
industry is dominated by small | 0:52:46 | 0:52:49 | |
firms, 98% of them are not employees
or less we need to watch that | 0:52:49 | 0:52:54 | |
closely, there isn't a lot of
evidence so far but we will monitor | 0:52:54 | 0:52:57 | |
that. Stephen, thank you. Carillion
apprentices, there are about 1400 of | 0:52:57 | 0:53:05 | |
them, about half of managed to find
new roles and new apprentices | 0:53:05 | 0:53:09 | |
elsewhere so -- apprenticeships
elsewhere. Good luck to the rest of | 0:53:09 | 0:53:15 | |
them, thank you. | 0:53:15 | 0:53:16 | |
They went in to the game calling
themselves the underdogs | 0:53:16 | 0:53:19 | |
but the Philadelphia Eagles caused
a stunning upset overnight, | 0:53:19 | 0:53:22 | |
beating the New England Patriots
to win their first Super Bowl. | 0:53:22 | 0:53:25 | |
The singer Justin Timberlake
provided a dazzling half-time show | 0:53:25 | 0:53:27 | |
but the action on the field
outshone the showbiz. | 0:53:27 | 0:53:29 | |
Let's take a look at
last night's action. | 0:53:29 | 0:53:32 | |
Meg Oliver is a correspondent
with the American network CBS. | 0:53:32 | 0:53:34 | |
She joins us now from Minneapolis
where the game took place. | 0:53:34 | 0:53:39 | |
My goodness me, you can see there
has been a proper party! How | 0:53:39 | 0:53:43 | |
wonderful! We at the UK love an
underdog winning. So do we and I | 0:53:43 | 0:53:51 | |
have to tell you, take a look at
this because this party is still | 0:53:51 | 0:53:55 | |
going on to quite a few people over
there. Look at the field, it is | 0:53:55 | 0:54:00 | |
strewn with confetti, people have
been doing snow angels in the | 0:54:00 | 0:54:03 | |
confetti, guess you would call them
football angels, it was an epic | 0:54:03 | 0:54:07 | |
game, the underdog, the Philadelphia
Eagles came into their first Super | 0:54:07 | 0:54:11 | |
Bowl victory and then they are up
against a dynastic, the New England | 0:54:11 | 0:54:15 | |
Patriot, trying to secure their
sixth victory, this game had people | 0:54:15 | 0:54:18 | |
in the stands on their feet the
entire time -- dynasty. It came down | 0:54:18 | 0:54:24 | |
to an exciting and where we saw the
new, excuse me, Philadelphia Eagles | 0:54:24 | 0:54:29 | |
quarterback when the MVP, he has
three touchdown, court one himself, | 0:54:29 | 0:54:32 | |
the crowd and crazy and some of
those Eagles fans couldn't put the | 0:54:32 | 0:54:37 | |
emotions into words. And MVP means
most valuable player and he was new | 0:54:37 | 0:54:42 | |
to the team in some ways, Nick
Foles? Louise Crawford he was on the | 0:54:42 | 0:54:48 | |
bench from most of the season! Are
starting quarterback was injured, he | 0:54:48 | 0:54:52 | |
stepped up and completely blew
everybody away. He was the underdog | 0:54:52 | 0:54:56 | |
coming into this. Illustrate that
point a little bit, a lot of those | 0:54:56 | 0:55:01 | |
Eagles fans came he wearing dog
masks, you know, and they embraced | 0:55:01 | 0:55:05 | |
the underdog spirit and they really
came in and Nick Foles had precise | 0:55:05 | 0:55:10 | |
passes, there were some unbelievable
catches on both sides and the | 0:55:10 | 0:55:13 | |
defence was over the top. This was a
game for the record books. It is, we | 0:55:13 | 0:55:18 | |
know that many millions of people
watch it and Justin Timberlake was | 0:55:18 | 0:55:22 | |
on at half-time, we know things go
wrong on this but it didn't. No, it | 0:55:22 | 0:55:28 | |
didn't! There was a lot of talk
about it because as you know this | 0:55:28 | 0:55:32 | |
was his third appearance at the
half-time show at the Super Bowl and | 0:55:32 | 0:55:36 | |
back in 2004 was the infamous
wardrobe malfunction, everyone was a | 0:55:36 | 0:55:40 | |
little nervous, who was he going to
bring out, but he came in, he | 0:55:40 | 0:55:45 | |
dazzled the crowd and he also had a
duet when he played the piano with | 0:55:45 | 0:55:49 | |
Prince, Prince is from Minneapolis,
some social media users were put off | 0:55:49 | 0:55:53 | |
by that but I would say over raw
here in the US bank stadium at one | 0:55:53 | 0:55:57 | |
was pleased, it was quite a show.
Give us a atmosphere because in the | 0:55:57 | 0:56:01 | |
UK many people would have been
watching but this is really an event | 0:56:01 | 0:56:05 | |
in the States, isn't it? This is a
huge event, this is when everyone in | 0:56:05 | 0:56:11 | |
America basically bombs over potato
chips and BR. They come together, | 0:56:11 | 0:56:15 | |
there are parties in homes across
the country and bars. -- bonds. | 0:56:15 | 0:56:19 | |
Everyone stops or they are doing to
watch because it isn't about four | 0:56:19 | 0:56:23 | |
all, there is the half-time
extravaganza and there is pop star | 0:56:23 | 0:56:30 | |
Pink! Who sang the national and
some, the rest of it or something | 0:56:30 | 0:56:36 | |
for everybody but this year, the
game definitely was the main | 0:56:36 | 0:56:39 | |
attraction. Lovely to speak to you,
with luck to everyone who has to | 0:56:39 | 0:56:44 | |
clean that up! | 0:56:44 | 0:56:50 | |
If you are bleary eyed this morning
after watching the Super Bowl, a | 0:56:50 | 0:56:54 | |
lovely day, I wish you were here. If
you are waking up and feeling the | 0:56:54 | 0:56:59 | |
cold, Carol will have a full
explanation of what to watch out for | 0:56:59 | 0:57:03 | |
and how this could be one of the
coldest weeks of the year. | 0:57:03 | 1:00:24 | |
in half an hour. | 1:00:24 | 1:00:26 | |
Plenty more on our website
at the usual address. | 1:00:26 | 1:00:28 | |
Now, though, it's back
to Dan and Louise. | 1:00:28 | 1:00:33 | |
Hello. | 1:00:33 | 1:00:34 | |
A very good morning. | 1:00:34 | 1:00:35 | |
This is Breakfast, with Dan Walker
and Louise Minchin. | 1:00:35 | 1:00:37 | |
The start of a crucial
week of Brexit talks. | 1:00:37 | 1:00:40 | |
As the EU's Chief Negotiator arrives
in London, Downing Street moves | 1:00:40 | 1:00:43 | |
to shore up divisions
in the Conservative party. | 1:00:43 | 1:00:51 | |
Good morning. | 1:01:00 | 1:01:01 | |
It's Monday the fifth of February. | 1:01:01 | 1:01:02 | |
Also this morning: | 1:01:02 | 1:01:03 | |
A man suspected of carrying out
the terror attacks that killed 130 | 1:01:03 | 1:01:06 | |
people in Paris three years ago,
is going on trial in Belgium. | 1:01:06 | 1:01:13 | |
The Duchess of Cambridge isses
a personal message calling | 1:01:13 | 1:01:15 | |
on parents and teachers to help
children feel happy with themselves. | 1:01:15 | 1:01:22 | |
Whether we are school leaders,
teachers, support staff, or parents, | 1:01:22 | 1:01:25 | |
we each have a crucial role to play. | 1:01:25 | 1:01:27 | |
Good morning. | 1:01:29 | 1:01:30 | |
One of our big name banks has banned
customers from buying controversial | 1:01:30 | 1:01:33 | |
cryptocurrency Bitcoin
on their credit cards. | 1:01:33 | 1:01:35 | |
I'm looking at why they've done
it and what it means | 1:01:35 | 1:01:38 | |
for eight million customers. | 1:01:38 | 1:01:39 | |
And in sport, a suprise win
for the underdogs in America's Super | 1:01:39 | 1:01:42 | |
Bowl. | 1:01:42 | 1:01:43 | |
The Philadelphia Eagles
beat the favourites, | 1:01:43 | 1:01:44 | |
the New England Patriots,
by 40 to 33. | 1:01:44 | 1:01:46 | |
It's the first time
they've won the title. | 1:01:46 | 1:01:53 | |
Let me hear you, Minneapolis! | 1:01:53 | 1:01:56 | |
And Justin Timberlake wows
the crowds at half time. | 1:01:56 | 1:01:59 | |
ending up dancing in the crowd. | 1:01:59 | 1:02:06 | |
It could be one of the coldest weeks
of the winter. | 1:02:06 | 1:02:09 | |
It could be one of the coldest weeks
of the winter. Good morning. A risk | 1:02:09 | 1:02:13 | |
of ice. A covering of snow,
especially in the south-east. | 1:02:13 | 1:02:19 | |
Sunshine in eastern areas. Some in
the south-west. Later on tonight, | 1:02:19 | 1:02:23 | |
rain and snow. More detailed in 15
minutes. Thank you. -- detail. The | 1:02:23 | 1:02:31 | |
main story. | 1:02:31 | 1:02:34 | |
The EU's Chief Negotiator,
Michel Barnier, will visit | 1:02:34 | 1:02:37 | |
Downing Street today for talks
about a possible transitional period | 1:02:37 | 1:02:39 | |
after Britain leaves
the European Union. | 1:02:39 | 1:02:41 | |
The Government has indicated it
remains determined to leave | 1:02:41 | 1:02:43 | |
the European Customs
Union after Brexit. | 1:02:43 | 1:02:45 | |
The move is seen as an attempt
to defuse a growing row | 1:02:45 | 1:02:48 | |
within the Conservative Party. | 1:02:48 | 1:02:56 | |
We should talk about that in a few
moments, including the infighting | 1:03:08 | 1:03:14 | |
with the Tory party in Brussels.
There is | 1:03:14 | 1:03:20 | |
with the Tory party in Brussels.
There is a lot to discuss this | 1:03:20 | 1:03:21 | |
morning. | 1:03:21 | 1:03:24 | |
A new ring-fenced tax to fund
the NHS and social care in England | 1:03:24 | 1:03:27 | |
has been proposed by
a panel of health experts. | 1:03:27 | 1:03:30 | |
The panel, commissioned
by the Liberal Democrats | 1:03:30 | 1:03:32 | |
which includes the former head
of NHS England Sir David Nicholson, | 1:03:32 | 1:03:35 | |
has also recommended a return
of caps on personal payments | 1:03:35 | 1:03:37 | |
for adult social care. | 1:03:37 | 1:03:38 | |
Here's our health editor, Hugh Pym. | 1:03:38 | 1:03:40 | |
Thousands of demonstrators marched
through London at the weekend, | 1:03:40 | 1:03:42 | |
calling for increased
funding for the NHS. | 1:03:42 | 1:03:44 | |
Health unions joined other
campaigners, arguing | 1:03:44 | 1:03:46 | |
there was a winter crisis
which needed urgent | 1:03:46 | 1:03:48 | |
action and investment. | 1:03:48 | 1:03:49 | |
Today, a report from health experts
including the former head of NHS | 1:03:49 | 1:03:52 | |
England has called for new answers
to NHS funding problems. | 1:03:52 | 1:04:00 | |
The report commissioned
by the Liberal Democrats calls | 1:04:00 | 1:04:02 | |
for an extra £4 billion on top
of inflation for the NHS in England | 1:04:02 | 1:04:06 | |
in the next financial year,
more than double the increase | 1:04:06 | 1:04:09 | |
announced in the budget, a single,
ring-fenced tax for health | 1:04:09 | 1:04:11 | |
and social care replacing national
insurance, and reinstating | 1:04:11 | 1:04:14 | |
a commitment to cap the costs paid
by individuals for social care. | 1:04:14 | 1:04:17 | |
The report argues that higher
funding needed for health and care | 1:04:17 | 1:04:20 | |
should come through increased
taxation, and that this will be more | 1:04:20 | 1:04:23 | |
transparent if there is a dedicated
tax for this purpose. | 1:04:23 | 1:04:26 | |
It is not a waste of a service. We
have to fund it. As a population, we | 1:04:29 | 1:04:36 | |
have to make this decision. This
form of taxation would make it | 1:04:36 | 1:04:40 | |
easier. | 1:04:40 | 1:04:44 | |
Longer waiting lists and rationing
for some treatments, | 1:04:44 | 1:04:46 | |
it says, are undermining the key
principles of the NHS. | 1:04:46 | 1:04:49 | |
In response, the Department
of Health and Social Care said | 1:04:49 | 1:04:52 | |
the NHS had been prioritised
in the budget, and an extra £2 | 1:04:52 | 1:04:55 | |
billion had already been provided
for social care in England. | 1:04:55 | 1:05:03 | |
Customers of the Lloyds Banking
Group have been banned from buying | 1:05:11 | 1:05:14 | |
crypto currencies like Bitcoin. | 1:05:14 | 1:05:16 | |
They say they are
protecting 8 million | 1:05:16 | 1:05:17 | |
customers from getting debt
they could not repay. | 1:05:17 | 1:05:25 | |
First, you have heard about it a
lot. But what is it? What is Bitcoin | 1:05:26 | 1:05:37 | |
it is a cryptocurrency, a digital
currency, a virtual currency, only | 1:05:37 | 1:05:43 | |
on the Internet. There are no notes,
no coins. It is not like a normal | 1:05:43 | 1:05:51 | |
currency with a Central Bank. They
are alike computer files. One | 1:05:51 | 1:05:57 | |
Bitcoin is like a single computer
file. It is generated by complicated | 1:05:57 | 1:06:04 | |
mathematics, like encryption
technology. That is what it is, | 1:06:04 | 1:06:11 | |
Internet currency. It is being used
more and more around the world. | 1:06:11 | 1:06:16 | |
Businesses and people are taking it
as a currency in exchange for goods | 1:06:16 | 1:06:20 | |
and services. That is why it has
increased in the last few years. It | 1:06:20 | 1:06:25 | |
is still very volatile. And Lloyds
is stopping people from buying it? | 1:06:25 | 1:06:32 | |
One year ago one Bitcoin was £700,
that is like the exchange rate. | 1:06:32 | 1:06:41 | |
November last year, £13,000, a huge
increase. Many people would have | 1:06:41 | 1:06:46 | |
made a lot of money. They thought
this could be a good way to make a | 1:06:46 | 1:06:52 | |
return. But prices can go down as
well as up. It fell to less than | 1:06:52 | 1:06:56 | |
£6,000. People trying to get in on
the act on a credit card could lose | 1:06:56 | 1:07:02 | |
a lot of money very quickly. Lloyds
is worried they could not pay it | 1:07:02 | 1:07:07 | |
back and could foot the bill. They
have said you cannot buy it any more | 1:07:07 | 1:07:11 | |
on your credit card, or any other
Cooper currency. Thank you. | 1:07:11 | 1:07:21 | |
The sole surviving suspect behind
the Paris terror attacks in 2015 | 1:07:21 | 1:07:24 | |
will go on trial in Belgium today. | 1:07:24 | 1:07:26 | |
Salah Abdeslam faces charges
relating to a shoot-out he had | 1:07:26 | 1:07:29 | |
with police while on the run
in Belgium in 2016. | 1:07:29 | 1:07:31 | |
He faces a second trial relating
to his involvement in the Paris | 1:07:31 | 1:07:35 | |
attacks at a later date. | 1:07:35 | 1:07:40 | |
He is not actually facing charges to
do with the attacks in Paris. He is | 1:07:40 | 1:07:45 | |
not. That is expected in two years'
time. Since that time, on the Friday | 1:07:45 | 1:07:52 | |
night, the 13th of November, when he
was pictured going to and coming | 1:07:52 | 1:07:56 | |
away from the scene on CCTV camera
at a service station, especially on | 1:07:56 | 1:08:00 | |
the way back. He is the last suspect
who was thought to have been among | 1:08:00 | 1:08:06 | |
those present, the last to have
information about what happened that | 1:08:06 | 1:08:10 | |
night, the | 1:08:10 | 1:08:17 | |
night, the link to the cell that
killed 130 at the Bataclan. Four | 1:08:17 | 1:08:20 | |
months after that, he was the most
wanted man of Europe, he was | 1:08:20 | 1:08:25 | |
discovered here near the criminal
court in Brussels. The police were | 1:08:25 | 1:08:31 | |
carrying out a random search and
thought it was an empty house. They | 1:08:31 | 1:08:36 | |
suspected they could be evidence and
came under serious fire by four men. | 1:08:36 | 1:08:43 | |
Allowed | 1:08:43 | 1:08:48 | |
Allowed -- They fired on the police,
and Salah, along with another man, | 1:08:59 | 1:09:03 | |
escaped by roof. They were found
close to his family home. It is four | 1:09:03 | 1:09:06 | |
days after | 1:09:06 | 1:09:11 | |
days after that there was an attack
at Brussels Airport. This is | 1:09:13 | 1:09:16 | |
possibly the first time we will hear
him in court. 200 officers are | 1:09:16 | 1:09:21 | |
expected to secure the premises
today. Thank you. We will follow | 1:09:21 | 1:09:24 | |
that through the next few days. | 1:09:24 | 1:09:29 | |
At the begining of what forecasters
say could be one of the coldest | 1:09:29 | 1:09:32 | |
weeks of the winter,
snow has led to a series | 1:09:32 | 1:09:35 | |
of accidents in Kent. | 1:09:35 | 1:09:36 | |
This was the footage taken
by the police as they attended | 1:09:36 | 1:09:39 | |
the incidents on the M20. | 1:09:39 | 1:09:40 | |
Luckily no-one was seriously injured
and the motorway has | 1:09:40 | 1:09:43 | |
now been cleared. | 1:09:43 | 1:09:44 | |
The Met Office has issued yellow
warnings of snow and ice for large | 1:09:44 | 1:09:47 | |
parts of the UK. | 1:09:47 | 1:09:53 | |
Give yourself some extra time this
morning to defrost the car. | 1:09:54 | 1:09:58 | |
A new mental health campaign
to encourage children "to be | 1:09:58 | 1:10:01 | |
comfortable in their own
skin" is being supported | 1:10:01 | 1:10:03 | |
by The Duchess of Cambridge. | 1:10:03 | 1:10:04 | |
Her Royal Highness, Kate Middleton
is pregnant with her third child | 1:10:04 | 1:10:07 | |
and says adults should help
encourage children to be the best | 1:10:07 | 1:10:10 | |
versions of themselves. | 1:10:10 | 1:10:11 | |
Childhood is an incredibly important
moment in our lives, it is a time | 1:10:11 | 1:10:16 | |
when we explore our personalities,
discover the potential that lies | 1:10:16 | 1:10:19 | |
within us, and | 1:10:19 | 1:10:26 | |
within us, and learn how we be
ourselves. Our experience of the | 1:10:26 | 1:10:29 | |
world at this early stage shapes who
we become as adults and how to be | 1:10:29 | 1:10:33 | |
comfortable in our own skin. Whether
we are school leaders, teachers, or | 1:10:33 | 1:10:36 | |
a support staff or parents, we each
have a crucial role to play. When we | 1:10:36 | 1:10:40 | |
are open and honest with each other
about the challenges we face, we can | 1:10:40 | 1:10:45 | |
work together to ensure the children
in our care have the chance to | 1:10:45 | 1:10:49 | |
become the best versions of
themselves. | 1:10:49 | 1:10:55 | |
Take a look at these dramatic
pictures of a sea rescue | 1:10:55 | 1:10:58 | |
from the RNLI. | 1:10:58 | 1:10:59 | |
The woman you can see
there in the water, was perched | 1:10:59 | 1:11:02 | |
on top of a submerged car,
after she became stranded on a beach | 1:11:02 | 1:11:05 | |
on the Cumbrian coast
as the tide was coming in. | 1:11:05 | 1:11:08 | |
The woman was forced to climb
on to the top of her vehicle | 1:11:08 | 1:11:11 | |
to escape rising sea water
between Mawbray and Beckfoot. | 1:11:11 | 1:11:14 | |
She was eventually rescued
by the lifeboat and treated | 1:11:14 | 1:11:16 | |
for hypothermia. | 1:11:16 | 1:11:17 | |
The RNLI said she had
a lucky escape. | 1:11:17 | 1:11:24 | |
You can see how lucky that escape
was. I was going to give | 1:11:25 | 1:11:36 | |
was. I was going to give you a fact,
but I can't remember what it is. The | 1:11:43 | 1:11:46 | |
tidal range... Faster than a
galloping horse? I will think about | 1:11:46 | 1:11:49 | |
it. The main story. | 1:11:49 | 1:11:53 | |
The Prime Minister and David Davis
will speak to the EU chief | 1:11:53 | 1:11:58 | |
negotiator, Michel Barnier. It could
shape the relationship when the UK | 1:11:58 | 1:12:06 | |
leads the EU. Normally we turned to
the screen and say Chris Mason is at | 1:12:06 | 1:12:16 | |
Westminster. I am delighted to say
he is here today. I can talk you | 1:12:16 | 1:12:26 | |
through some of the dramatic people
of the Brexit process, the central | 1:12:26 | 1:12:32 | |
characters, absolutely central,
especially this person, you hear a | 1:12:32 | 1:12:37 | |
lot about him, here he is. Michel
Barnier. Good morning. A digital | 1:12:37 | 1:12:42 | |
cardboard cutout. He leads the
negotiations for the EU. He is from | 1:12:42 | 1:12:50 | |
East France. | 1:12:50 | 1:12:56 | |
East France. He was a Europe
minister for France during the | 1:12:57 | 1:13:00 | |
1990s. Why am I mentioning that?
When he was doing that gig, he | 1:13:00 | 1:13:07 | |
bumped into a certain David Davis.
They go back a long way. At the | 1:13:07 | 1:13:12 | |
time, he was John Major is' Europe
minister. -- Major's. They are | 1:13:12 | 1:13:24 | |
having lunch today in Downing Street
talking about Brexit, especially the | 1:13:24 | 1:13:27 | |
transition period. It looks like the
UK will negotiate for the two year | 1:13:27 | 1:13:34 | |
period starting from March next
year. The Prime Minister will join | 1:13:34 | 1:13:39 | |
them, not unusual, because she lives
there. She will meet with Michel | 1:13:39 | 1:13:46 | |
Barnier. Another character who will
not be there but we'll be in | 1:13:46 | 1:13:49 | |
cardboard cutout form, is not
digital, is Jacob Rees-Mogg. -- | 1:13:49 | 1:13:55 | |
will. He is on the air the whole
time talking about Brexit. He chairs | 1:13:55 | 1:14:01 | |
and important committee... Says the
man who is always on the air talking | 1:14:01 | 1:14:10 | |
about Brexit. You have me there. He
is the chair of a group of | 1:14:10 | 1:14:15 | |
backbenchers who wants to make sure
they get a true and clean and pure | 1:14:15 | 1:14:20 | |
Brexit rather than a mishmash of
watered-down compromise, which is | 1:14:20 | 1:14:23 | |
what they fear. The Prime Minister
overnight has reacted to some | 1:14:23 | 1:14:28 | |
criticism coming from people like
Jacob Rees-Mogg talking about the | 1:14:28 | 1:14:32 | |
notion of the customs union, one of
the central point of contention | 1:14:32 | 1:14:37 | |
around the whole thing. Michel
Barnier will be giving a big news | 1:14:37 | 1:14:43 | |
conference later this week fleshing
out where we got used. We | 1:14:43 | 1:14:51 | |
out where we got used. We will talk
about that later. They want us to | 1:14:52 | 1:14:55 | |
not be part of the or a customs
union. The government is having to | 1:14:55 | 1:15:03 | |
be more clear because of the heat
from people like Jacob Rees-Mogg. | 1:15:03 | 1:15:10 | |
Christopher very popular, isn't it,
it has been number one, a Brexit pod | 1:15:10 | 1:15:16 | |
cast. That is with Adam Pleming who
neatly joins us from Brussels. Let's | 1:15:16 | 1:15:22 | |
talk about the customs union. That
news, how will be played out where | 1:15:22 | 1:15:29 | |
you are? So the UK published a paper
in the summer about what it thought | 1:15:29 | 1:15:35 | |
about customs and gave two options
are the future and so people have | 1:15:35 | 1:15:38 | |
had quite a long time to buy
gestating Brussels. They thought it | 1:15:38 | 1:15:41 | |
was ambitious and didn't quite
understand how it would work in | 1:15:41 | 1:15:44 | |
practice and hadn't really thought
about it since then but of course it | 1:15:44 | 1:15:48 | |
has roared back up the agenda
because of all the tough coming on | 1:15:48 | 1:15:51 | |
at Westminster and EU has different
customs unions, different customs | 1:15:51 | 1:15:56 | |
arrangements that different
countries. It has won with Turkey | 1:15:56 | 1:15:58 | |
that only covers agriculture. It has
a smaller one with San Marino. So it | 1:15:58 | 1:16:04 | |
is possible to have the spoke
customs arrangements that aren't the | 1:16:04 | 1:16:08 | |
custom union that apply to the EU
countries. In private, Michel | 1:16:08 | 1:16:14 | |
Barnier has talked about the
possibility of there being some kind | 1:16:14 | 1:16:17 | |
of customs union with the UK, he was
talking to the Northern Ireland | 1:16:17 | 1:16:21 | |
Select Committee a few weeks ago,
and in the minutes, it shows they | 1:16:21 | 1:16:25 | |
discussed that. At the EU will say
what it says all along, the closer | 1:16:25 | 1:16:29 | |
the UK wants to be to the EU after
Brexit, the closer the UK will have | 1:16:29 | 1:16:34 | |
to stick to the EU's rules, that is
what the EU says, and they also say | 1:16:34 | 1:16:39 | |
it isn't just about customs or about
goods crossing borders, various | 1:16:39 | 1:16:44 | |
tariffs and checks on them as to
whether they have paid the right | 1:16:44 | 1:16:48 | |
import or export duties but also
other regulations that go with it, | 1:16:48 | 1:16:51 | |
things like animal health, plant
standards, product safety standards, | 1:16:51 | 1:16:57 | |
so actually, you would probably
still have to check goods crossing | 1:16:57 | 1:17:01 | |
the border full of those things
which means you still might have to | 1:17:01 | 1:17:04 | |
have the big queues at Port at
Dover, depending on what kind of the | 1:17:04 | 1:17:10 | |
tunnel is, so it is about other
things not just goods and that have | 1:17:10 | 1:17:14 | |
a knock-on effect so there is a
debate about how the void a hard | 1:17:14 | 1:17:18 | |
border between Northern Ireland the
Republic of Ireland? While all these | 1:17:18 | 1:17:22 | |
discussions are going on, you
mentioned, there is infighting in | 1:17:22 | 1:17:26 | |
the Tory party and wonder how that
is reflect from a European point of | 1:17:26 | 1:17:30 | |
view in these discussions. You
thought I was nerdy! Adam can really | 1:17:30 | 1:17:34 | |
go for it when he talks about his
minutes and he has lever arch files | 1:17:34 | 1:17:38 | |
will of position papers and
partnership papers! There is nothing | 1:17:38 | 1:17:43 | |
about Brexit but Adam misses. The
conversation is crucial, plenty of | 1:17:43 | 1:17:49 | |
people, and Adam will say this,
plenty in Brussels in positions that | 1:17:49 | 1:17:53 | |
matter are assiduous readers of
British newspapers and British radio | 1:17:53 | 1:17:56 | |
and TV shows, they know the rows
that are going on and there is a | 1:17:56 | 1:18:02 | |
huge row going on with the
Conservatives at the moment but one | 1:18:02 | 1:18:05 | |
about Theresa May's future, not
about Brexit, and that overlap, and | 1:18:05 | 1:18:09 | |
the challenger Theresa May is to get
into the real crunchy bits of these | 1:18:09 | 1:18:13 | |
Brexit negotiations is that she will
try and strive to achieve some | 1:18:13 | 1:18:16 | |
compromise to accommodate as many
people as possible and every time | 1:18:16 | 1:18:20 | |
she does that, there will be screams
from one side or the other that she | 1:18:20 | 1:18:24 | |
is selling out. Right. I like it
when you describe that has crunchy. | 1:18:24 | 1:18:30 | |
I will bank that complement, it will
feature again! | 1:18:30 | 1:18:37 | |
feature again! Adam,, they are on
Brexitcase, on radio life. You can | 1:18:38 | 1:18:45 | |
download it from their website.
Popular and with good reason as | 1:18:45 | 1:18:51 | |
well. | 1:18:51 | 1:18:52 | |
It's 7:18. | 1:18:52 | 1:18:55 | |
It is very chilly, a number of
warnings out there. | 1:18:55 | 1:18:59 | |
Let's find out what
that means for you. | 1:18:59 | 1:19:01 | |
Here's Carol. | 1:19:01 | 1:19:02 | |
Here's Carol. | 1:19:02 | 1:19:03 | |
Let's crack on. Good morning, this
week 's weather will remain cold, | 1:19:03 | 1:19:08 | |
cold start as you rightly said, and
through the week widespread frost | 1:19:08 | 1:19:13 | |
and some will season snow and in
fact it pretty much holds true for | 1:19:13 | 1:19:16 | |
what we have at the moment. We have
some light snow across parts of | 1:19:16 | 1:19:20 | |
Kent, Essex, Sussex, East Anglia,
snow showers Upper East Coast. West, | 1:19:20 | 1:19:26 | |
it is dry but nonetheless we could
still see a covering of snow across | 1:19:26 | 1:19:30 | |
parts of Devon and the wintry
showers. Towards the east, cloud, | 1:19:30 | 1:19:34 | |
some breaks, snow showers, and a
keen wind. It does really | 1:19:34 | 1:19:40 | |
accentuates the cold feel. Ayresome
Park, from showers, moving west into | 1:19:40 | 1:19:46 | |
wealth and north-western England and
Northern Ireland it is largely dry | 1:19:46 | 1:19:49 | |
as it is across Scotland but any
showers across Scotland are also | 1:19:49 | 1:19:52 | |
likely to be wintry and don't forget
wherever you are risk the risk of | 1:19:52 | 1:19:56 | |
ice. Through the day the showers in
the east will tend to weaken a total | 1:19:56 | 1:20:01 | |
because if you form across the
Midlands in through Wales and other | 1:20:01 | 1:20:05 | |
mentioned south-west England. A lot
of dry weather. Some wintry | 1:20:05 | 1:20:08 | |
sunshine. But it is winter, it will
feel cold. But a richer at the | 1:20:08 | 1:20:13 | |
moment is minus five. Later, cloud
will build in the west, the wind | 1:20:13 | 1:20:20 | |
will strengthen, some gal forces
across north-west Scotland, then | 1:20:20 | 1:20:23 | |
comes the rain and as it engages
with the cold air, it will readily | 1:20:23 | 1:20:29 | |
fall as snow across Northern Ireland
and Scotland, getting into northern | 1:20:29 | 1:20:32 | |
England and later Wales and behind
it, a good rush of wintry showers, | 1:20:32 | 1:20:35 | |
again the risk of ice wherever you
are, and some patchy fog warning | 1:20:35 | 1:20:40 | |
ahead of the band of rain, sleet and
snow. Maybe some lightening as well. | 1:20:40 | 1:20:44 | |
Through the course of tomorrow, this
whole weather front producing this | 1:20:44 | 1:20:50 | |
sinks South and starts to peter out
in touch. The cloud will build ahead | 1:20:50 | 1:20:54 | |
of it, eradicating the bright start.
Heidi, wintry showers around up | 1:20:54 | 1:20:58 | |
there could be a lot of fun trying
and it will feel cold, temperatures | 1:20:58 | 1:21:02 | |
2-4. As we head into the evening,
the front continues its journey | 1:21:02 | 1:21:06 | |
moving towards the south-east, the
temperature in the evening will | 1:21:06 | 1:21:11 | |
drop, it rejuvenates, and what we
will find is further snow falling | 1:21:11 | 1:21:14 | |
across the wash for example in East
Anglia and towards London, and in | 1:21:14 | 1:21:19 | |
the south-east. Again, those are
snow showers. Behind, clear skies, | 1:21:19 | 1:21:24 | |
the risk of ice, another cold night.
Tuesday sees the back edge of the | 1:21:24 | 1:21:28 | |
front clearing away to the
continent. A ridge of high pressure | 1:21:28 | 1:21:31 | |
builds us. The next and then comes
in, bringing wet and windy weather. | 1:21:31 | 1:21:36 | |
Dry weather, a cold day, on the
leading edge of the system we are | 1:21:36 | 1:21:41 | |
likely to see snow and then in comes
the rain and behind it we can see | 1:21:41 | 1:21:45 | |
further snow showers and again, the
risk of ice. Generally 3- five | 1:21:45 | 1:21:48 | |
degrees. Thank you, Carol. See | 1:21:48 | 1:21:53 | |
risk of ice. Generally 3- five
degrees. Thank you, Carol. See you | 1:21:53 | 1:21:54 | |
later. | 1:21:54 | 1:21:58 | |
From the Chilean is of the UK we
will take you back to Rio. -- | 1:21:58 | 1:22:03 | |
Chilean is | 1:22:03 | 1:22:03 | |
At the Rio Olympics,
Jack Laugher and Chris Mears won | 1:22:03 | 1:22:06 | |
Great Britain's first Olympic diving
gold medal with victory in the men's | 1:22:06 | 1:22:09 | |
synchronised 3m springboard. | 1:22:09 | 1:22:10 | |
With just two months to go until
the Gold Coast Commonwealth Games | 1:22:10 | 1:22:13 | |
in Australia, we can reveal
to you this morning that the winning | 1:22:13 | 1:22:17 | |
duo will compete for
Team England as part | 1:22:17 | 1:22:19 | |
of the 13-strong diving team. | 1:22:19 | 1:22:20 | |
Chris and Jack join us now. | 1:22:20 | 1:22:26 | |
well done, congratulations, how
exciting. We are really looking | 1:22:26 | 1:22:30 | |
forward to it. It has been a while
since we've been to the Gold Coast | 1:22:30 | 1:22:35 | |
and Commonwealth Games back in 2014
we came away with a gold medal there | 1:22:35 | 1:22:40 | |
so it will be nice to follow that
up. Really excited about it. I think | 1:22:40 | 1:22:45 | |
as Jack said the Gold Coast,
couldn't be a much better place. | 1:22:45 | 1:22:48 | |
Very much looking forward to it. How
is life and professionally, | 1:22:48 | 1:22:53 | |
personally, how has it changed since
winning an Olympic gold? Not that | 1:22:53 | 1:22:57 | |
much, really! We still live in the
same place, we are still training, | 1:22:57 | 1:23:03 | |
still do normal stuff. We had a
whirlwind two or three months, a | 1:23:03 | 1:23:07 | |
little different, it was such a huge
feet to win in the Olympics and the | 1:23:07 | 1:23:12 | |
first Britons to do it in diving was
huge for us and to come away with | 1:23:12 | 1:23:17 | |
that was fantastic so life has
changed but I think not all that | 1:23:17 | 1:23:20 | |
much. It was crazy for a few months
and the new kind of just get back to | 1:23:20 | 1:23:26 | |
it and it is normal and it is
working towards the next gold and | 1:23:26 | 1:23:30 | |
that is just how it goes. I remember
the green pool. I don't want to | 1:23:30 | 1:23:35 | |
mention it but what was that? That
was extraordinary. I've never seen | 1:23:35 | 1:23:39 | |
anything like it. You get the
Commonwealth Games in India in 2010 | 1:23:39 | 1:23:43 | |
and that had a it is a bacterial
problem or something but nothing | 1:23:43 | 1:23:48 | |
like that! That was crazy! They said
it was completely safe though. I had | 1:23:48 | 1:23:53 | |
an ear of infection -- infection, it
could have been from that, I don't | 1:23:53 | 1:24:00 | |
know, but it was strange. It put
other athletes off and we just | 1:24:00 | 1:24:05 | |
embraced it. It is interesting, tell
us about having one and found the | 1:24:05 | 1:24:10 | |
brilliantly, it's a different kind
of pressure now, isn't it? Yeah! | 1:24:10 | 1:24:15 | |
When we did our first competition
after the Olympic Games, it was | 1:24:15 | 1:24:18 | |
massive. Was everyone like oh,
here's these two... That actually | 1:24:18 | 1:24:22 | |
announced us, this is quick and
Jack... Or Jack and Chris... What | 1:24:22 | 1:24:29 | |
are you not telling us? They
announced us as Olympic champions | 1:24:29 | 1:24:36 | |
and it was an added pressure. When
you dive, you are synchronised, when | 1:24:36 | 1:24:41 | |
you talk, you are synchronised. It
is amazing. You must sort of be able | 1:24:41 | 1:24:46 | |
to be quite telepathic with each
other. Me and Chris are best friends | 1:24:46 | 1:24:51 | |
and we know exactly what each other
is thinking all the time and that | 1:24:51 | 1:24:55 | |
helps us as well because when we
compete, if someone feels a little | 1:24:55 | 1:25:00 | |
nervous or scared or you can see
someone making slight mistakes, we | 1:25:00 | 1:25:03 | |
can sort of bring each other back
into where we need to be so we think | 1:25:03 | 1:25:08 | |
it works so well for both of us. We
pick up a little things and snow | 1:25:08 | 1:25:12 | |
when to say something or not to. And
you finish each other's sentences's | 1:25:12 | 1:25:16 | |
it's so cute. Obviously, getting the
MBE and coming back and everyone | 1:25:16 | 1:25:23 | |
wanting to talk to you and all of
attention, is there a bit of a drop | 1:25:23 | 1:25:27 | |
off after the Olympics because life
is different but you have a supreme | 1:25:27 | 1:25:33 | |
high we achieved the greatest thing
you can in your sport and then you | 1:25:33 | 1:25:37 | |
are back to normal life relatively
quickly? Definitely, both of us | 1:25:37 | 1:25:41 | |
experienced that. It was weird
because Chris went to America and I | 1:25:41 | 1:25:45 | |
was in England and we didn't speak
for about one month and were we met | 1:25:45 | 1:25:50 | |
up afterwards we talked about it and
it was like we were going through | 1:25:50 | 1:25:54 | |
the same things but completely apart
from one another which was weird to | 1:25:54 | 1:25:57 | |
be honest but slowly recovered and
kind of got back to it and it seems | 1:25:57 | 1:26:01 | |
so stupid to be kind of sad after
winning an Olympic medal but you | 1:26:01 | 1:26:05 | |
come back to it after being so high
at the peak of my career and my life | 1:26:05 | 1:26:09 | |
saying it was a bit weird. You have
to come down. As Jack said, it is | 1:26:09 | 1:26:14 | |
the peak. You were working towards a
force long. And once you get it, you | 1:26:14 | 1:26:20 | |
go I have done it but what now? You
don't think about that? What now, | 1:26:20 | 1:26:25 | |
and do you have a special dive
planned? We can't really progress | 1:26:25 | 1:26:29 | |
much more than we have? We did the
highest and hardest dive in the | 1:26:29 | 1:26:35 | |
entire world so we are still working
on our signature kind of dive, the | 1:26:35 | 1:26:43 | |
42.5 somersaults and three twists,
it kind of separated us from | 1:26:43 | 1:26:47 | |
everybody at the Olympics. There is
always work to do, we are always | 1:26:47 | 1:26:52 | |
working on fine tuning. And you have
some world Series events between now | 1:26:52 | 1:26:56 | |
and the Commonwealth games in the
buildup? One of them is Japan which | 1:26:56 | 1:27:00 | |
is really exciting to go there for
the first time. In preparation for | 1:27:00 | 1:27:04 | |
the Tokyo Olympics. It will be
weird, we have Beijing and Japan, | 1:27:04 | 1:27:09 | |
some training, about two months of
the Gold Coast before you leave so | 1:27:09 | 1:27:13 | |
it could be worse, couldn't it?
Listen, huge good luck, I know you | 1:27:13 | 1:27:19 | |
don't need it but we will be
watching closely. We give very much | 1:27:19 | 1:27:22 | |
indeed. But if it was ever had to
get who were so synchronised in | 1:27:22 | 1:27:27 | |
their absence. They don't even have
to look at each other, they | 1:27:27 | 1:27:32 | |
beautifully, seamlessly roll on.
Thanks, guys. | 1:27:32 | 1:27:35 | |
You're watching Breakfast. | 1:27:35 | 1:27:36 | |
Still to come this morning: | 1:27:36 | 1:27:37 | |
They spent 62 days on ice,
travelling up to 27 miles a day. | 1:27:37 | 1:27:41 | |
We'll talk to the British team
of female soldiers dubbed | 1:27:41 | 1:27:43 | |
'Team Ice Maiden' about their
incredible journey crossing | 1:27:43 | 1:27:46 | |
Antarctica in freezing
temperatures as low as minus 40. | 1:27:46 | 1:27:51 | |
Time now to get the news,
travel and weather where you are. | 1:27:51 | 1:31:14 | |
I'm back with the latest
from the BBC London newsroom | 1:31:14 | 1:31:17 | |
in half an hour. | 1:31:17 | 1:31:24 | |
Hello. | 1:31:24 | 1:31:24 | |
This is Breakfast, with Dan Walker
and Louise Minchin. | 1:31:24 | 1:31:30 | |
Here's what's coming up: | 1:31:30 | 1:31:32 | |
The EU's Chief Negotiator,
Michel Barnier, will be | 1:31:32 | 1:31:34 | |
in Downing Street today for talks
about a possible transitional period | 1:31:34 | 1:31:37 | |
after Britain leaves the EU. | 1:31:37 | 1:31:38 | |
He'll meet the Brexit Secretary
David Davis in the first of a series | 1:31:38 | 1:31:42 | |
of discussions this week. | 1:31:42 | 1:31:43 | |
It comes after the Government
indicated it remains determined | 1:31:43 | 1:31:45 | |
to leave the European Customs Union
when Brexit takes place next year. | 1:31:45 | 1:31:53 | |
A new ring-fenced tax to fund
the NHS and social care in England | 1:31:54 | 1:31:57 | |
has been proposed by
a panel of health experts. | 1:31:57 | 1:32:00 | |
The panel, set up by
the Liberal Democrats, | 1:32:00 | 1:32:02 | |
says the NHS in England should be
given an extra four billion pounds. | 1:32:02 | 1:32:05 | |
The government says it prioritsed
NHS funding at the last Budget, | 1:32:05 | 1:32:08 | |
providing two billion
pounds for social care. | 1:32:08 | 1:32:15 | |
The sole surviving suspect behind
the Paris terror attacks in 2015 | 1:32:15 | 1:32:18 | |
will go on trial in Belgium today. | 1:32:18 | 1:32:19 | |
Salah Abdeslam faces charges
relating to a shootout he had | 1:32:19 | 1:32:22 | |
with police while on the run
in Belgium in 2016. | 1:32:22 | 1:32:25 | |
He faces a second trial relating
to his involvement in the Paris | 1:32:25 | 1:32:28 | |
attacks at a later date. | 1:32:28 | 1:32:36 | |
It could be one of the coldest
weeks of the year. | 1:32:36 | 1:32:41 | |
There's been a number of road
accidents as snow fell on the M20 | 1:32:41 | 1:32:44 | |
motorway in Kent overnight. | 1:32:44 | 1:32:45 | |
No-one was seriously injured
but police are urging drivers | 1:32:45 | 1:32:48 | |
to take extra care. | 1:32:48 | 1:32:49 | |
The Met Office has issued yellow
warnings for snow and ice | 1:32:49 | 1:32:52 | |
across the east of the country. | 1:32:52 | 1:33:00 | |
A warning on strikes from the Chief
Executive of Ryanair set to cause | 1:33:06 | 1:33:12 | |
travel disruption over Easter. He
said demands from pilots were | 1:33:12 | 1:33:19 | |
laughable. They have broken down.
The airline has been forced to | 1:33:19 | 1:33:24 | |
cancel tens of thousands of flights
in autumn over staff terms and | 1:33:24 | 1:33:33 | |
conditions. | 1:33:33 | 1:33:36 | |
Customers of the Lloyds Banking
group have been banned | 1:33:36 | 1:33:39 | |
from using their credit cards to buy
virtual currencies such as Bitcoin. | 1:33:39 | 1:33:42 | |
The decision affects all account
holders with Lloyds Bank, | 1:33:42 | 1:33:45 | |
Bank of Scotland, Halifax and MBNA. | 1:33:45 | 1:33:46 | |
The group says it's protecting
customers from running up debts | 1:33:46 | 1:33:49 | |
they could never repay. | 1:33:49 | 1:33:57 | |
A new mental health campaign
to encourage children "to be | 1:33:59 | 1:34:01 | |
comfortable in their own
skin" is being supported | 1:34:01 | 1:34:03 | |
by The Duchess of Cambridge. | 1:34:03 | 1:34:05 | |
Her Royal Highness, Kate Middleton
is pregnant with her third child | 1:34:05 | 1:34:08 | |
and says adults should help
encourage children to be the best | 1:34:08 | 1:34:11 | |
versions of themselves. | 1:34:11 | 1:34:12 | |
There are yellow weather warnings
for snow and ice in place for large | 1:34:12 | 1:34:16 | |
parts of the country. | 1:34:16 | 1:34:17 | |
We'll find out what that means
for you at home when Carol brings us | 1:34:17 | 1:34:20 | |
the weather in ten minutes' time. | 1:34:20 | 1:34:22 | |
It is worth paying attention to. It | 1:34:22 | 1:34:31 | |
is cold. We had a fire out due to
the cold. | 1:34:31 | 1:34:39 | |
the cold. I was rushing. The alarm
finished as I was approaching the | 1:34:45 | 1:34:48 | |
door and I turned around and went
back the same way. It was a false | 1:34:48 | 1:34:52 | |
alarm. I was thinking "We left Dan
behind! Who was watching him?" | 1:34:52 | 1:35:00 | |
Thankfully, you are OK. Good
morning, Holly. I don't think either | 1:35:00 | 1:35:05 | |
of you was up watching the Super
Bowl. I had a bit of a look. I | 1:35:05 | 1:35:14 | |
couldn't help myself. We talk about
it for weeks on end, then it is | 1:35:14 | 1:35:28 | |
suddenly done. We love underdogs.
Everyone thought it would be Tom | 1:35:28 | 1:35:31 | |
Brady again. It shocked loads of
people. Be Eagles played incredibly. | 1:35:31 | 1:35:37 | |
It all happens in the final seconds
of the game. Some people said on | 1:35:37 | 1:35:43 | |
1:35:43 | 1:35:48 | ||
Twitter that they stayed awake until
half-time and fell asleep. But it | 1:35:50 | 1:35:53 | |
was so exciting this year and so
many stayed up to watch it. | 1:35:53 | 1:35:57 | |
There'll be plenty of partying
in Philly right now | 1:35:57 | 1:35:59 | |
with the Philadelphia Eagles
winning the Super Bowl | 1:35:59 | 1:36:01 | |
for the very first time. | 1:36:01 | 1:36:03 | |
They beat the favourites
and defending champions | 1:36:03 | 1:36:05 | |
the New England Patriots
in what was a thrilling | 1:36:05 | 1:36:07 | |
high scoring game. | 1:36:07 | 1:36:08 | |
But the hero was Nick Foles. | 1:36:08 | 1:36:12 | |
Here's the touchdown that will be
shown a billion times. | 1:36:12 | 1:36:15 | |
Foles, becoming the first
quarterback to throw and catch | 1:36:15 | 1:36:18 | |
touchdowns in Super Bowl history. | 1:36:18 | 1:36:19 | |
He only came into the side
towards the end of the season | 1:36:19 | 1:36:22 | |
as an injury replacement. | 1:36:22 | 1:36:28 | |
That is what life is about. | 1:36:28 | 1:36:32 | |
Time stops. | 1:36:32 | 1:36:32 | |
I get to celebrate this
with my wife and daughter. | 1:36:32 | 1:36:35 | |
She has been there through
everything, so has my family. | 1:36:35 | 1:36:38 | |
To celebrate this moment,
that is what it is about. | 1:36:38 | 1:36:40 | |
I am just grateful, you know? | 1:36:40 | 1:36:48 | |
Let me hear you, Minneapolis! | 1:36:50 | 1:36:51 | |
And as always the half time show
didn't fail to disappoint, | 1:36:51 | 1:36:54 | |
as Justin Timberlake
wowed the crowds. | 1:36:54 | 1:36:56 | |
A 12 minute performance that
included a tribute to Prince. | 1:36:56 | 1:36:59 | |
That 13-year-old boy could be
the most popular person | 1:36:59 | 1:37:01 | |
at his school today, getting
a selfie with the star as well. | 1:37:01 | 1:37:09 | |
We tracked down the selfie. It did
not take long for him to go viral. | 1:37:18 | 1:37:32 | |
What a selfie to get, though. | 1:37:32 | 1:37:37 | |
What a star to the Six Nations!
After Wales' stunning victory over | 1:37:37 | 1:37:45 | |
Scotland. In that last-minute drop
goal in Ireland's win over France. | 1:37:45 | 1:37:55 | |
Two dries for Sam. | 1:37:58 | 1:38:01 | |
In the women's Six Nations,
England put in a huge second | 1:38:01 | 1:38:04 | |
performance to beat Italy
42 points to seven. | 1:38:04 | 1:38:06 | |
England Captain Sarah Hunter went
over for a hat-trick of tries | 1:38:06 | 1:38:09 | |
helping her team secure
the bonus point. | 1:38:09 | 1:38:11 | |
An absolutely amazing game
at Anfield yesterday then. | 1:38:11 | 1:38:13 | |
Two injury time goals,
two Spurs penalties: one offside | 1:38:13 | 1:38:15 | |
and missed, and the second,
Harry Kane's 100th Premier League | 1:38:15 | 1:38:18 | |
goal. | 1:38:18 | 1:38:18 | |
And before all of that came one
of the goals of the season. | 1:38:18 | 1:38:22 | |
Substitute Victory Wanyama smashing
home an equaliser with ten | 1:38:22 | 1:38:24 | |
minutes to go. | 1:38:24 | 1:38:25 | |
That cancelled out Mo Salah's
earlier stirke, only | 1:38:25 | 1:38:27 | |
for the Egyptian to wriggle
through and score this brilliant | 1:38:27 | 1:38:30 | |
goal at the end. | 1:38:30 | 1:38:31 | |
But there was still time
for a second Spurs penalty. | 1:38:31 | 1:38:34 | |
Kane had one saved a few minutes
before, but with the last kick | 1:38:34 | 1:38:37 | |
of the game he made it 100 not out! | 1:38:37 | 1:38:40 | |
A breathless and
controversial 2-2 draw. | 1:38:40 | 1:38:48 | |
Crystal Palace came from behind to
draw 1-1 with Newcastle. They | 1:39:11 | 1:39:25 | |
draw 1-1 with Newcastle. They move
up to 14, Newcastle move to 16. I am | 1:39:25 | 1:39:27 | |
almost out of breath after all of
that action to fill up and it is | 1:39:27 | 1:39:31 | |
only Monday morning. -- action. | 1:39:31 | 1:39:35 | |
From David Walliams swimming
the Channel to Eddie Izzard running | 1:39:35 | 1:39:38 | |
43 marathons, Sport Relief has
a proven track record in persuading | 1:39:38 | 1:39:41 | |
celebrities to take on tough
physical challenges. | 1:39:41 | 1:39:43 | |
This morning, we can tell
you who is next to throw their hat, | 1:39:43 | 1:39:47 | |
or should we say cycling
helmet, into the ring. | 1:39:47 | 1:39:52 | |
BBC Radio Two's Zoe Ball is getting
on her bike for a cycling challenge | 1:39:52 | 1:39:56 | |
to raise money for an issue
close to her heart. | 1:39:56 | 1:39:59 | |
She here to tell us more. | 1:39:59 | 1:40:04 | |
Oh my goodness! What have I done! I
don't know! What are you going to | 1:40:04 | 1:40:13 | |
do? It involves a bicycle. I will do
it from the 17th to the 23rd of | 1:40:13 | 1:40:20 | |
March. I know that you cycle. | 1:40:20 | 1:40:29 | |
March. I know that you cycle. I have
ridden shopping bikes and so on. I | 1:40:29 | 1:40:31 | |
have | 1:40:31 | 1:40:36 | |
have been on beach cruisers and a
BMX. But road bikes, cleats, oh my | 1:40:41 | 1:40:44 | |
God. I have had an altercation with
the curb, an angry driver, and two | 1:40:44 | 1:40:53 | |
slow-motion falls. You had never
been on a road bike before? Never. | 1:40:53 | 1:41:00 | |
She gave | 1:41:00 | 1:41:05 | |
She gave me some top tips at looking
out for undercarriages, which I | 1:41:11 | 1:41:14 | |
won't mention, but wind and rain...
I did the furthest I have done so | 1:41:14 | 1:41:17 | |
far the other day. I will not tell
you yet, we will reveal it, but it | 1:41:17 | 1:41:22 | |
is a long way for a novice. I
managed to do a good distance. I did | 1:41:22 | 1:41:26 | |
really well. I realised I was
terrified of going downhill. | 1:41:26 | 1:41:34 | |
terrified of going downhill. You
have to brake. Water, gravel, it all | 1:41:46 | 1:41:47 | |
scares me. Don't brake on the
gravel. I keep worrying about my | 1:41:47 | 1:41:50 | |
teeth. At the end I was thinking, I
have done it! I have done it! I | 1:41:50 | 1:41:55 | |
could not get the cleats out,
slow-motion fell down, and a postman | 1:41:55 | 1:42:00 | |
helped me up. I will take my hat off
for you. The other day you posted | 1:42:00 | 1:42:07 | |
your breakfast. You are eating a
lot. I have been eating a lot. | 1:42:07 | 1:42:11 | |
Everyone says | 1:42:11 | 1:42:22 | |
Everyone says you have to toughen up
your core, great distances. I mean, | 1:42:23 | 1:42:26 | |
I don't do sport. You went indoor
skydiving with me. I am not an | 1:42:26 | 1:42:30 | |
athlete. The wonderful thing about
cycling, I have done it, you can | 1:42:30 | 1:42:33 | |
eat. You need to eat enormous
amounts. My lovely trainer, it is | 1:42:33 | 1:42:38 | |
amazing, I did one session with him
and he was just invested in me. | 1:42:38 | 1:42:47 | |
and he was just invested in me. We
did An indoor water bike, you go for | 1:42:52 | 1:42:54 | |
hours and it toughens you up. He
said you can eat what you want. I am | 1:42:54 | 1:42:58 | |
eating so much. People will be
thinking why did you sign up? It is | 1:42:58 | 1:43:04 | |
bringing awareness and raising money
for something close to your heart. | 1:43:04 | 1:43:06 | |
One of the big issues at Sport
Relief is mental health. Many people | 1:43:06 | 1:43:11 | |
know that I lost my boyfriend, well,
last year, I lost my boyfriend who | 1:43:11 | 1:43:17 | |
suffered from depression for a long
time. I was touched and moved by | 1:43:17 | 1:43:22 | |
people who got in touch with me who
had been through the same thing with | 1:43:22 | 1:43:26 | |
the same issues. I think everyone
knows that mental health resources | 1:43:26 | 1:43:31 | |
are under huge pressure. There are a
lot of people not getting the | 1:43:31 | 1:43:35 | |
support they need in time. There is
a long waiting list to get therapy. | 1:43:35 | 1:43:41 | |
And, so, I was left with lots of
questions. And the great thing about | 1:43:41 | 1:43:46 | |
this is we are making a documentary
where I will go and visit projects | 1:43:46 | 1:43:52 | |
helping people living with mental
illness, which could be self-harm, | 1:43:52 | 1:43:57 | |
anxiety, depression, Griezmann,
bullying, all of those issues. It | 1:43:57 | 1:44:02 | |
covers so many. -- bereavement. One
in four of us are dealing with | 1:44:02 | 1:44:10 | |
mental illness. It is huge. So, what
are we doing? How can we help? How | 1:44:10 | 1:44:17 | |
can people find out? There are
incredible organisations and people. | 1:44:17 | 1:44:23 | |
It is finding those and spreading
some awareness. And hopefully some, | 1:44:23 | 1:44:26 | |
you know, helping people find the
right help, and some hope moving | 1:44:26 | 1:44:30 | |
forward. I listened to your first
show back on Radio2. It is emotional | 1:44:30 | 1:44:39 | |
listening to you. You get the sense
it has so many impacts and so many | 1:44:39 | 1:44:43 | |
people. Yes. I think, you know,
living with someone going through | 1:44:43 | 1:44:49 | |
that, it is hard to understand what
they are going through if you have | 1:44:49 | 1:44:53 | |
never been through it. It is hard to
help. You want to fix things. | 1:44:53 | 1:44:58 | |
Perhaps that is not what you should
be doing. I want to talk to many | 1:44:58 | 1:45:03 | |
people along the way in the
documentary and find out how to best | 1:45:03 | 1:45:07 | |
help those you love and help them
find, you know, the right help. | 1:45:07 | 1:45:14 | |
When you were going through this you
have those times when your legs are | 1:45:14 | 1:45:18 | |
hurting, your back is hurting,
everything takes. Honest, your | 1:45:18 | 1:45:21 | |
eyelashes can hurt! You will need
something to drive you on and it | 1:45:21 | 1:45:27 | |
seems like you have already got that
sort of mental space where you will | 1:45:27 | 1:45:30 | |
be able to say I have to do this. I
have got to do this. And hopefully | 1:45:30 | 1:45:35 | |
keep the conversation going, raise
money. I'm not the only one, Greg | 1:45:35 | 1:45:39 | |
James is trying to beat his
incredible feat of five triathlons | 1:45:39 | 1:45:43 | |
in five days. He is doing the
crazier than that which you can | 1:45:43 | 1:45:47 | |
follow on iPlayer and Radio one and
Alex Jones from the one show is | 1:45:47 | 1:45:51 | |
facing the mother of all challenges
raising awareness for mental health | 1:45:51 | 1:45:55 | |
issues and we will hear all about
that on the one show and we want | 1:45:55 | 1:45:59 | |
people to get involved. We hope that
during the week, if we can be | 1:45:59 | 1:46:04 | |
altogether, improvised in the
nation, 1 billion steps a day and if | 1:46:04 | 1:46:08 | |
you want to know how to get
involved, download the app and go to | 1:46:08 | 1:46:14 | |
our website. Everyone join in. We
can all add our steps. Let's not let | 1:46:14 | 1:46:21 | |
you go without talking about
Strictly. Brendan isn't going on. It | 1:46:21 | 1:46:26 | |
is a end of an era, Rendon is a
legend, I have loved watching him, | 1:46:26 | 1:46:31 | |
it will be strained without him. I
think, I have to say, Sean and his | 1:46:31 | 1:46:37 | |
top gun deaths this year was, I was
so jealous of both of them actually | 1:46:37 | 1:46:41 | |
when they did that. It was so good
though when they did the Charleston, | 1:46:41 | 1:46:46 | |
it is the one of my favourite ever
so he is an amazing boys so I look | 1:46:46 | 1:46:51 | |
forward to seeing more from him, it
will be strange though and we will | 1:46:51 | 1:46:54 | |
miss him. Good luck with the
training. How many hours a day? | 1:46:54 | 1:46:58 | |
Training? Now? A good 25 minutes a
day! No, loads! Loads! When will we | 1:46:58 | 1:47:09 | |
know? I think I have four weeks of
training. Like the way you prepare | 1:47:09 | 1:47:15 | |
because I thought Alex on Friday and
she has done nothing. Like genuinely | 1:47:15 | 1:47:20 | |
done nothing and she says I will be
OK. I will be fine! Lovely to see | 1:47:20 | 1:47:27 | |
you, so much good luck and we will
be following you Breakfast. Sport | 1:47:27 | 1:47:31 | |
Relief returned for a week from the
70s to the 23rd of March, it gets | 1:47:31 | 1:47:37 | |
the app, join us with their 1
billion steps and followed Zoe and | 1:47:37 | 1:47:40 | |
Greg and everyone taking part. Let's
look at the scene on a cold Dartmoor | 1:47:40 | 1:47:49 | |
this morning. My goodness, it looks
absolutely beautiful. We are | 1:47:49 | 1:47:55 | |
therefore a very interesting reason.
We will tell you shortly. | 1:47:55 | 1:48:04 | |
We will tell you shortly. There we
will go on the bike today, she will | 1:48:04 | 1:48:07 | |
need to take good care, while she
not? She will! There is ice around | 1:48:07 | 1:48:12 | |
and | 1:48:12 | 1:48:12 | |
not? She will! There is ice around
and it is freezing. Not just her, | 1:48:12 | 1:48:16 | |
all of us, the weather forecast for
the week is it will remain cold | 1:48:16 | 1:48:21 | |
through the week, widespread frost
and some snow as well and it holds | 1:48:21 | 1:48:24 | |
true for today. Lovely Weather
Watchers pictures this morning, | 1:48:24 | 1:48:29 | |
Hastings it has been snowing. Some
snow this warning across Kent, had | 1:48:29 | 1:48:33 | |
ethics, Vics and before Sussex,
Essex, and East Anglia. Dry weather | 1:48:33 | 1:48:42 | |
around, and although the wintry
showers will tend to ease a touch, | 1:48:42 | 1:48:45 | |
one or two across the Midlands,
Wales and also in the south-west | 1:48:45 | 1:48:48 | |
England. So this afternoon across
north-west England, some dry weather | 1:48:48 | 1:48:52 | |
and still cold, still a few showers
coming in on the wind and cold wind | 1:48:52 | 1:48:56 | |
coming from the north-east into some
eastern parts of England. Showery | 1:48:56 | 1:49:00 | |
not all of us will see it. A lot of
dry weather in the west but we are | 1:49:00 | 1:49:05 | |
not immune to those showers across
parts of south-west England. | 1:49:05 | 1:49:10 | |
Especially so given. Wales, some dry
weather, sunshine but it will feel | 1:49:10 | 1:49:15 | |
cold. As it will across Northern
Ireland. A change is coming for you | 1:49:15 | 1:49:19 | |
because the cloud were built in the
west with some rain coming in. Think | 1:49:19 | 1:49:24 | |
of Scotland, dry weather but in the
west, the cloud will build, the wind | 1:49:24 | 1:49:28 | |
will strengthen and gale force with
exposure, and the rain arrives. | 1:49:28 | 1:49:33 | |
Through this evening as the band of
rain, sleet and snow sinks | 1:49:33 | 1:49:36 | |
southwards, once again it will be
the risk of ice. Almost anywhere. | 1:49:36 | 1:49:41 | |
Those wintry showers moving behind
and ahead of it, some patchy fog. | 1:49:41 | 1:49:47 | |
Tomorrow, it would pick up the band
of rain, it continues its journey | 1:49:47 | 1:49:51 | |
moving south-east was through the
course of the day, eventually | 1:49:51 | 1:49:53 | |
tending to fizzle. Ahead of it, the
cloud will build, eradicating the | 1:49:53 | 1:49:59 | |
bright start, and ahead of it,
sunshine but a good Kippa-Ring of | 1:49:59 | 1:50:02 | |
wintry showers in the north and the
west. Temperatures 2-4. We will | 1:50:02 | 1:50:08 | |
still cold! -- field. The
temperature will fall towards | 1:50:08 | 1:50:15 | |
evening and as the weather front
starts to push southwards, it will | 1:50:15 | 1:50:20 | |
reinvigorate, introducing more snow
across parts of East Anglia, and | 1:50:20 | 1:50:23 | |
down towards the south-east
generally. The Lazard, they can also | 1:50:23 | 1:50:27 | |
be some thunder and lightning in a
particular band. The risk of ice, a | 1:50:27 | 1:50:33 | |
cold night, a cold start, then the
front during the day is there, ahead | 1:50:33 | 1:50:37 | |
of its average of high pressure
builds in that things will settle | 1:50:37 | 1:50:40 | |
down however look at what is coming,
the next several fronts. Cold start | 1:50:40 | 1:50:44 | |
to the day, the rest of us, frost,
sunshine, the cloud building from | 1:50:44 | 1:50:49 | |
the and ahead of it, we will see
some snow. The brain then comes in | 1:50:49 | 1:50:53 | |
and behind it, once again we will
see further snow showers and the | 1:50:53 | 1:50:57 | |
risk of ice. There is an awful lot
happening in the weather forecast | 1:50:57 | 1:51:01 | |
this week. My goodness, there is! We
need to petition for more time for | 1:51:01 | 1:51:08 | |
Carroll, she has a lot to cram in.
All we could be quiet. -- or. | 1:51:08 | 1:51:18 | |
Now, if you're struggling to get out
of bed this morning, | 1:51:18 | 1:51:21 | |
you're not alone. | 1:51:21 | 1:51:21 | |
Today is traditionally the day
in which the highest numbers | 1:51:21 | 1:51:24 | |
of workers call in sick,
but that could be changing. | 1:51:24 | 1:51:27 | |
Sean has been looking at what it
means for businesses. | 1:51:27 | 1:51:30 | |
On a Monday? The first Monday of
February. It is starting to change a | 1:51:30 | 1:51:34 | |
little bit, if you are thinking
about it today your bosses may be a | 1:51:34 | 1:51:38 | |
little more aware about what people
have done in the past. Good morning. | 1:51:38 | 1:51:41 | |
Yes, according to one law firm,
it's estimated that today | 1:51:41 | 1:51:44 | |
approximately 350,000 people
will need a day off sick today. | 1:51:44 | 1:51:47 | |
The absence rate on Mondays
across the year is almost double | 1:51:47 | 1:51:50 | |
that of Fridays. | 1:51:50 | 1:51:51 | |
23.5% compared to 13.2%. | 1:51:51 | 1:51:52 | |
About 137 million working days
are lost every year to sickness | 1:51:52 | 1:51:55 | |
or injury in the UK every year. | 1:51:55 | 1:51:57 | |
That works out as just over four
days off unwell per worker, | 1:51:57 | 1:52:00 | |
although that's down from an average
of seven days per worker in 1993. | 1:52:00 | 1:52:03 | |
But it does still have an impact,
and managing sickness is a big | 1:52:03 | 1:52:07 | |
problem for employers. | 1:52:07 | 1:52:15 | |
The big problem managing this
sickness generally and let's have a | 1:52:24 | 1:52:27 | |
look at why these are | 1:52:27 | 1:52:29 | |
sickness generally and let's have a
look at why these are changing, and | 1:52:29 | 1:52:29 | |
O'Leary is with us, and employment
law expert. Good morning. | 1:52:29 | 1:52:34 | |
Traditionally it is the first
Monday? The first Monday of February | 1:52:34 | 1:52:38 | |
was traditionally the National
sickie day and it has been the case | 1:52:38 | 1:52:44 | |
had 10 years but the pattern has
changed since last year and it is | 1:52:44 | 1:52:47 | |
interspersed through the year and
predominantly Monday is seeing a | 1:52:47 | 1:52:49 | |
spike in sickness. Why the change?
Why would we have looked at this | 1:52:49 | 1:52:54 | |
Monday previously? We noticed it
ourselves for the first Monday in | 1:52:54 | 1:52:59 | |
the very and now we have noticed it
has come interspersed, possibly | 1:52:59 | 1:53:04 | |
because employees have cottoned on
to the fact and to gets a lot of | 1:53:04 | 1:53:08 | |
publicity and possibly it is one of
the reasons for the change. When you | 1:53:08 | 1:53:12 | |
save 350,000 people taking off the
day off work because of illness, | 1:53:12 | 1:53:16 | |
national sickie day gives the
impression that everyone is pulling | 1:53:16 | 1:53:19 | |
a sickie and actually couldn't --
could have made in but lots of | 1:53:19 | 1:53:24 | |
people surely are not well and
cannot into work. Absolutely, and | 1:53:24 | 1:53:28 | |
those figures don't take into
account the genuine absences and of | 1:53:28 | 1:53:32 | |
course there are those and it is
just that traditionally, we've seen | 1:53:32 | 1:53:35 | |
a lot of excuses for absence rather
than looking at the reasons and the | 1:53:35 | 1:53:40 | |
underlying reasons why people are
absent. What do you think they are | 1:53:40 | 1:53:44 | |
because we have had people getting
in touch, we put this on Twitter, | 1:53:44 | 1:53:48 | |
Lisa said I have MS and I feel
terrible when I get sent home | 1:53:48 | 1:53:51 | |
because it was playing up the first
time in eight years. And her | 1:53:51 | 1:53:56 | |
employer has a duty to support her
through that, but potentially is a | 1:53:56 | 1:54:00 | |
disability so that our obligations
on the employer. Georgina says she | 1:54:00 | 1:54:04 | |
is in her third year with a seasonal
job, we talk about seasonal jobs may | 1:54:04 | 1:54:08 | |
be being a little bit more the hours
of flexible but not be guaranteed | 1:54:08 | 1:54:14 | |
contract, guaranteed hours. She said
I fell ill today but I am still | 1:54:14 | 1:54:18 | |
going in. Do you think people who
are not on the local contracts may | 1:54:18 | 1:54:23 | |
be feel like they need to go in even
if they are not fit for work? | 1:54:23 | 1:54:27 | |
Certainly because the reality is
they will not get paid and it will | 1:54:27 | 1:54:31 | |
impact them and it may impact on
their employers luck with that of | 1:54:31 | 1:54:34 | |
employing them again so for example
with a seasonal job they employ up | 1:54:34 | 1:54:38 | |
for the employer may not use them
again because are unreliable. It | 1:54:38 | 1:54:41 | |
shouldn't happen, should it? It
shouldn't and that is why it's for | 1:54:41 | 1:54:46 | |
procedures to be in place to try to
identify the reason are the absence | 1:54:46 | 1:54:50 | |
and tackle that. Thank you, MR. --
Emma. People say I am self-employed | 1:54:50 | 1:54:59 | |
and if I have a day off it directly
hits my business. It is tough, there | 1:54:59 | 1:55:04 | |
are people pulling a sickie but the
wider issue businesses have to | 1:55:04 | 1:55:08 | |
manage that is a tricky one. Sean,
thank you. | 1:55:08 | 1:55:10 | |
We know that Dartmoor is home
to some stunning scenery but can it | 1:55:10 | 1:55:14 | |
make for arresting audio? | 1:55:14 | 1:55:15 | |
Breakfast's John Maguire is finding
out for us this morning. | 1:55:15 | 1:55:20 | |
Good morning. Morning. -2.5 we
reckon it is so pretty chilly, I'm | 1:55:20 | 1:55:30 | |
not sure what the wind factor is
doing, perhaps Carol can tell us | 1:55:30 | 1:55:33 | |
later. It feels even colder.
Dartmoor, here it is, absolutely | 1:55:33 | 1:55:38 | |
extraordinary, look at the sun
coming in the east breaking through | 1:55:38 | 1:55:41 | |
the cloud, creating all of these
wonderful different colours, the | 1:55:41 | 1:55:45 | |
palate here is extraordinary, we
have pink centigrays and greens and | 1:55:45 | 1:55:49 | |
forms. It is a wild and it is a
wonderful place and it is about to | 1:55:49 | 1:55:53 | |
get it own wireless, it is going to
be a community radio station that | 1:55:53 | 1:55:57 | |
will macro four I will climb up on
here, it will get its own community | 1:55:57 | 1:56:05 | |
station as I say that not pursue
perhaps radio that you might not | 1:56:05 | 1:56:09 | |
have ever heard before. No traffic
will travel all sport bulletins or | 1:56:09 | 1:56:15 | |
DJ banter in between records or
anything like that, they will use | 1:56:15 | 1:56:19 | |
this, the people behind this are
saying that this, Dartmoor, will be | 1:56:19 | 1:56:23 | |
the studio. It will be the sounds
from right across the moor, not only | 1:56:23 | 1:56:31 | |
that but the sounds of the
community, conversations, local | 1:56:31 | 1:56:34 | |
people going around their daily life
will stop what you can see this | 1:56:34 | 1:56:38 | |
morning, it will make this
incredible vista, it will turn that | 1:56:38 | 1:56:41 | |
into sound and it will be an
extraordinary listen, I think. It | 1:56:41 | 1:56:46 | |
will tell you more after | 1:56:46 | 2:00:07 | |
in half an hour. | 2:00:07 | 2:00:08 | |
Plenty more on our website
at the usual address. | 2:00:08 | 2:00:11 | |
Bye for now. | 2:00:11 | 2:00:11 | |
Hello this is Breakfast,
with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. | 2:00:15 | 2:00:17 | |
The start of a crucial
week of Brexit talks. | 2:00:17 | 2:00:19 | |
As the EU's chief negotiator arrives
in London, Downing Street moves | 2:00:19 | 2:00:22 | |
to shore up divisions
in the Conservative Party. | 2:00:22 | 2:00:30 | |
Good morning it's
Monday 5th February. | 2:00:38 | 2:00:41 | |
Also this morning: | 2:00:41 | 2:00:42 | |
A man suspected of carrying out
the terror attacks that killed 130 | 2:00:42 | 2:00:46 | |
people in Paris three years ago
is going on trial in Belgium. | 2:00:46 | 2:00:51 | |
The Duchess of Cambridge issues
a personal message calling | 2:00:51 | 2:00:55 | |
on parents and teachers to help
children feel happy with themselves. | 2:00:55 | 2:01:03 | |
Whether we all school leaders,
teachers, support | 2:01:04 | 2:01:07 | |
Whether we all school leaders,
teachers, support staff or parents, | 2:01:07 | 2:01:07 | |
we each have a crucial role to play. | 2:01:07 | 2:01:12 | |
Good morning. | 2:01:12 | 2:01:13 | |
Europe's biggest airline is warning
of strikes this Spring. | 2:01:13 | 2:01:15 | |
Ryanair boss Michael O'Leary has
blamed demands from pilots | 2:01:15 | 2:01:17 | |
after union talks broke down. | 2:01:17 | 2:01:18 | |
I'll have more in a moment. | 2:01:18 | 2:01:21 | |
And in sport, it's all
over for another year, | 2:01:21 | 2:01:22 | |
but did you stay up to watch? | 2:01:22 | 2:01:24 | |
In what was a thrilling
Super Bowl... | 2:01:24 | 2:01:25 | |
The Philadelphia Eagles beat
the favourites New England Patriots, | 2:01:25 | 2:01:27 | |
the first time they've
won the title. | 2:01:27 | 2:01:34 | |
Let me hear you, Minneapolis... | 2:01:34 | 2:01:36 | |
As always the half-time
show didn't disappoint. | 2:01:36 | 2:01:39 | |
This year it was all
about Justin Timberlake, | 2:01:39 | 2:01:41 | |
selfies and Prince. | 2:01:41 | 2:01:42 | |
It's frosty but beautiful over
Dartmoor this morning. | 2:01:42 | 2:01:50 | |
Carol has news of more cold.
Frosty and beautiful for many areas | 2:01:53 | 2:01:57 | |
this morning with a risk of ice. We
have snow across Essex, Kent, Sussex | 2:01:57 | 2:02:03 | |
and East Anglia. Snow showers across
eastern England and then later in | 2:02:03 | 2:02:08 | |
the day, more rain and snow comes
our way, but this time from the | 2:02:08 | 2:02:12 | |
north-west.
Details in 15 minutes. We need them, | 2:02:12 | 2:02:16 | |
thank you, Carol. | 2:02:16 | 2:02:20 | |
Good morning. | 2:02:20 | 2:02:23 | |
First, our main story. | 2:02:23 | 2:02:24 | |
Europe's chief negotiator,
Michel Barnier, will visit | 2:02:24 | 2:02:26 | |
Downing Street today for talks
about a possible transitional period | 2:02:26 | 2:02:28 | |
after Britain leaves the EU. | 2:02:28 | 2:02:30 | |
The Government has indicated it
remains determined to leave | 2:02:30 | 2:02:32 | |
the Customs Union after Brexit. | 2:02:32 | 2:02:33 | |
The move is seen as an attempt
to defuse growing tensions | 2:02:33 | 2:02:36 | |
in the Conservative Party. | 2:02:36 | 2:02:37 | |
Our political correspondent,
Chris Mason joins us now. | 2:02:37 | 2:02:39 | |
A big week for the main
players in Brexit? | 2:02:39 | 2:02:43 | |
Really big week. Relation sometimes
between the UK and Brussels and | 2:02:43 | 2:02:47 | |
within the UK and the Conservative
Party are even colder than Carol's | 2:02:47 | 2:02:53 | |
forecast. We are into the crunchy
bits of these figures the oceans. It | 2:02:53 | 2:02:57 | |
feels like we have been droning on
about Brexit everyday... I wouldn't | 2:02:57 | 2:03:02 | |
say droning on, informing us. We are
getting to the crucial stage with | 2:03:02 | 2:03:09 | |
just over a year to go before Brexit
actually happens. You are the | 2:03:09 | 2:03:14 | |
central characters? Absolutely
crucial, Michel Barnier. He is | 2:03:14 | 2:03:20 | |
absolutely crucial, he is the EU's
chief Brexit negotiator and he is in | 2:03:20 | 2:03:26 | |
Downing Street for negotiations. Who
is he? He is from the South east of | 2:03:26 | 2:03:30 | |
France, where they help the Winter
Olympics in 1982. He was the local | 2:03:30 | 2:03:38 | |
MP. Anyway, he became a Europe
Minister for France in the 1990s and | 2:03:38 | 2:03:43 | |
bumped into another man central to
this, Mr Davies, David Davis, Brexit | 2:03:43 | 2:03:50 | |
secretary. They were both Europe
Minister 's 20 odd years ago. | 2:03:50 | 2:03:56 | |
Central to the negotiations. They
will be having lunch in Downing | 2:03:56 | 2:03:59 | |
Street. When they have finished
their beans on toast, Theresa May is | 2:03:59 | 2:04:04 | |
dropping in. Some crucial cabinet
meeting, we call it the Brexit War | 2:04:04 | 2:04:17 | |
Cabinet this week. Senior government
figures to work out what the | 2:04:17 | 2:04:21 | |
government wants. A lot of critics
say is the government cannot agree | 2:04:21 | 2:04:25 | |
what it once before it goes into
these negotiations. Someone who is | 2:04:25 | 2:04:29 | |
not in the room today but
effectively like a cardboard cutout | 2:04:29 | 2:04:34 | |
is Jason Rees Mogg, Conservative
backbencher, described in the | 2:04:34 | 2:04:38 | |
Economist magazine this week as
being like the Royal yacht Britannia | 2:04:38 | 2:04:44 | |
in human form or a red phone box in
the flesh. Speaking to the idea that | 2:04:44 | 2:04:50 | |
he is a traditionalist and is
absolute absent at -- Advocate | 2:04:50 | 2:04:57 | |
Brexit Anglesey any attempt of
watering down a selling alcohol | 2:04:57 | 2:05:01 | |
project as watering down and Theresa
May have to keep people like him | 2:05:01 | 2:05:09 | |
onside. Also the 48% that voted for
Brexit onside as well, and that is | 2:05:09 | 2:05:15 | |
not easy. Quick word on the customs
union? Yes, the customs union, | 2:05:15 | 2:05:22 | |
central to our membership of the
European Union. What it means is we | 2:05:22 | 2:05:26 | |
can sell stuff to other European
countries without an additional tax | 2:05:26 | 2:05:31 | |
being added on. It also means when
we buy stuff from outside of the | 2:05:31 | 2:05:37 | |
European Union, what is a common
external tariff, uniform tax is | 2:05:37 | 2:05:41 | |
added on. It means that in the
customs union we cannot go off | 2:05:41 | 2:05:45 | |
around the world and strike a trade
arrangement with America or India or | 2:05:45 | 2:05:51 | |
whoever it might be. For those who
are advocates of Brexit, unless you | 2:05:51 | 2:05:56 | |
leave the customs union, you are not
making the most of leaving the | 2:05:56 | 2:06:00 | |
European Union. Others will argue we
should stay close to our nearest | 2:06:00 | 2:06:05 | |
trading partners. Downing Street
will no doubt say we will leave the | 2:06:05 | 2:06:12 | |
customs union after the transition
period, but there might be some | 2:06:12 | 2:06:16 | |
arrangement, as yet not defined in
the long term. Thank you very much. | 2:06:16 | 2:06:24 | |
In the last half hour,
the man who was described | 2:06:24 | 2:06:27 | |
as Europe's most wanted has gone
on trial in Belgium. | 2:06:27 | 2:06:29 | |
Salah Abdeslam, is thought to be
the last surviving suspect | 2:06:29 | 2:06:31 | |
of the Paris attacks in 2015. | 2:06:31 | 2:06:33 | |
He is facing charges relating
to a shootout he had with police | 2:06:33 | 2:06:36 | |
while on the run in Belgium. | 2:06:36 | 2:06:37 | |
Let's speak to our Europe reporter,
Gavin Lee who is in Brussels | 2:06:37 | 2:06:40 | |
for us this morning. | 2:06:40 | 2:06:43 | |
Good morning. The Paris charges are
still to come, this is specifically | 2:06:43 | 2:06:49 | |
for the event, the shoot out with
the police? Yes, the Friday evening, | 2:06:49 | 2:06:57 | |
which many remember, 130 people
killed in the terrorist attacks at | 2:06:57 | 2:07:03 | |
the Bataclan, multiple areas of
Paris, the sole survivor, you can | 2:07:03 | 2:07:10 | |
hear the police cars, such a big
security operation at the courthouse | 2:07:10 | 2:07:18 | |
in Brussels. Salah Abdeslam arrived
a short time ago. He is alleged to | 2:07:18 | 2:07:25 | |
have fled the scene, he is caught on
CCTV at a service | 2:07:25 | 2:07:33 | |
CCTV at a service station on the way
to Brussels. This case relates to | 2:07:34 | 2:07:39 | |
when he was discovered in a safe
house about three miles from here. | 2:07:39 | 2:07:43 | |
Police went to the building and came
under serious fire, it | 2:07:43 | 2:07:48 | |
intermittently, lasted several
hours. Three officers were injured | 2:07:48 | 2:07:53 | |
and Salah Abdeslam was said to have
fled via the roof. A few days after | 2:07:53 | 2:08:00 | |
that the word the Brussels attacks
at the airport. This is one specific | 2:08:00 | 2:08:08 | |
elements, a smaller element of the
bigger terror allegations against | 2:08:08 | 2:08:12 | |
him. But the lawyers for him say he
is willingly taking part, he has | 2:08:12 | 2:08:16 | |
been silent in prison since. It may
be we get some information about the | 2:08:16 | 2:08:22 | |
wider investigation he is accused
of. Kevin, good to talk to you this | 2:08:22 | 2:08:27 | |
morning. | 2:08:27 | 2:08:30 | |
A new ring-fenced tax to fund
the NHS and social care in England | 2:08:30 | 2:08:33 | |
has been proposed by a panel
of health experts. | 2:08:33 | 2:08:35 | |
The panel, commissioned
by the Liberal Democrats has also | 2:08:35 | 2:08:41 | |
recommended a return of caps
on personal payments | 2:08:41 | 2:08:43 | |
for adult social care. | 2:08:43 | 2:08:48 | |
A couple of big business
stories this morning, | 2:08:48 | 2:08:50 | |
including a warning of travel misery
for Ryanair passengers. | 2:08:50 | 2:08:52 | |
Sean is here with the details. | 2:08:52 | 2:08:56 | |
If you are thinking of flying
Ryanair, it is around Easter? Yes, | 2:08:56 | 2:09:03 | |
this is from the boss of Ryanair.
There has been a bit of back and | 2:09:03 | 2:09:07 | |
forth between him and the pilots.
Ryanair have been in talks with that | 2:09:07 | 2:09:12 | |
pilots since before Christmas to
avoid the strikes over the festive | 2:09:12 | 2:09:14 | |
season we had. The talks have broken
down so Michael O'Leary has said the | 2:09:14 | 2:09:21 | |
man is from pilots are laughable.
Those are his words. The airline was | 2:09:21 | 2:09:27 | |
caused to cancel tens of thousands
of flights following its leave | 2:09:27 | 2:09:31 | |
booking system for pilots to have
holidays. Disruption at Easter will | 2:09:31 | 2:09:35 | |
be a big problem for the business
and passengers as well. Also this | 2:09:35 | 2:09:40 | |
morning, we have been talking all
morning, credit card ban at Lloyds | 2:09:40 | 2:09:45 | |
bank when it comes to purchasing
crypto currencies. I cannot manage | 2:09:45 | 2:09:52 | |
the tweet at the minute but I will
later on. This online currency, bit | 2:09:52 | 2:09:58 | |
cloying, it is so volatile, it was
£13,000 in November, now it is just | 2:09:58 | 2:10:04 | |
under 7000. But Lloyds bank have
banned customers from using credit | 2:10:04 | 2:10:11 | |
cards to buy these Bitcoins and
other crypto currencies. Research | 2:10:11 | 2:10:20 | |
today for the Institute for Fiscal
Studies shows there is a pay gap | 2:10:20 | 2:10:23 | |
between male and female graduates,
but it is widening. The biggest | 2:10:23 | 2:10:28 | |
factor is leaving their careers and
working part-time after becoming | 2:10:28 | 2:10:33 | |
mothers. It is a big issue we will
be talking about a lot more tomorrow | 2:10:33 | 2:10:38 | |
as well. Men and women and lower
incomes are seeing the pay gap | 2:10:38 | 2:10:42 | |
narrow. They go, that is the biggest
contributing factor. | 2:10:42 | 2:10:50 | |
At the begining of what forecasters
say could be one of the coldest | 2:10:54 | 2:10:57 | |
weeks of the winter,
snow has led to a series | 2:10:57 | 2:11:00 | |
of accidents in Kent. | 2:11:00 | 2:11:01 | |
This was the footage taken
by the police as they attended | 2:11:01 | 2:11:05 | |
incidents on the M20,
where there were | 2:11:05 | 2:11:07 | |
a number of crashes. | 2:11:07 | 2:11:08 | |
Luckily, no-one was seriously
injured and the motorway | 2:11:08 | 2:11:10 | |
has now been cleared. | 2:11:10 | 2:11:11 | |
A number of train services have been
disrupted between Hastings | 2:11:11 | 2:11:15 | |
and Eastbourne due to ice. | 2:11:15 | 2:11:18 | |
The Duchess of Cambridge has
recorded a personal message to try | 2:11:18 | 2:11:21 | |
and spur children on to be
comfortable in their own skin. | 2:11:21 | 2:11:25 | |
Kate, who is pregnant
with her third child, | 2:11:25 | 2:11:28 | |
recorded the message to launch
Children's Mental Health Week. | 2:11:28 | 2:11:31 | |
Childhood is an incredibly important
moment in our lives, it is a time | 2:11:31 | 2:11:34 | |
when we explore our personalities,
discover the potential | 2:11:34 | 2:11:36 | |
that lies within us,
and learn how we be ourselves. | 2:11:36 | 2:11:44 | |
Our experience of the world at this
early stage shapes who we become | 2:11:44 | 2:11:47 | |
as adults and how to be comfortable
in our own skin. | 2:11:47 | 2:11:52 | |
Whether we are school leaders,
teachers, or a support staff | 2:11:52 | 2:11:55 | |
or parents, we each have a crucial
role to play. | 2:11:55 | 2:11:57 | |
When we are open and honest
with each other about the challenges | 2:11:57 | 2:12:01 | |
we face, we can work together
to ensure the children in our care | 2:12:01 | 2:12:04 | |
have the chance to become the best
versions of themselves. | 2:12:04 | 2:12:12 | |
It could be pretty dramatic weather,
Carol will have the details. | 2:12:21 | 2:12:27 | |
We always listen to Carol anyway but
more attention required this | 2:12:27 | 2:12:30 | |
morning. | 2:12:30 | 2:12:32 | |
Six women from the British Army
have become the largest | 2:12:32 | 2:12:34 | |
all-female group to ski
coast-to-coast across Antarctica. | 2:12:34 | 2:12:36 | |
The Ice Maiden team took just 62
days to complete their 1 | 2:12:36 | 2:12:39 | |
thousand mile expedition. | 2:12:39 | 2:12:40 | |
In a moment, we'll speak
to three of the team, | 2:12:40 | 2:12:42 | |
but first here's a reminder of just
how gruelling their challenge was. | 2:12:42 | 2:12:50 | |
SOFT MUSIC PLAYS. | 2:12:54 | 2:13:02 | |
Delightful. | 2:13:26 | 2:13:27 | |
Oh! | 2:13:27 | 2:13:28 | |
Oh! | 2:13:28 | 2:13:29 | |
Oh, it snowed! | 2:13:29 | 2:13:33 | |
LAUGHTER. | 2:13:33 | 2:13:37 | |
Ooooohhh! | 2:13:37 | 2:13:42 | |
APPLAUSE. | 2:13:42 | 2:13:50 | |
And joining us now from Sandhurst
are Major Sandy Hennis, | 2:13:56 | 2:14:00 | |
Lance Sergeant Sophie Montagne
and Major Nics Wetherill. | 2:14:00 | 2:14:07 | |
Thank you for joining us. Who wants
to start? Why did you want to go on | 2:14:07 | 2:14:12 | |
an adventure like this? Go on, Nics.
I came out with this idea about ten | 2:14:12 | 2:14:22 | |
years ago when I went to see
somebody who gave a great talk about | 2:14:22 | 2:14:28 | |
his crossing of Antarctica. I
realised I wasn't really happy with | 2:14:28 | 2:14:31 | |
just hearing about it from someone
else, I wanted to do it myself. But | 2:14:31 | 2:14:36 | |
is where the idea came from. Over
the last ten years it has been great | 2:14:36 | 2:14:41 | |
to include as many women as possible
and make it an all-female team. Tell | 2:14:41 | 2:14:46 | |
us about taking part in it, what we
most looking forward to? | 2:14:46 | 2:14:55 | |
The first hints of Antarctica,
stepping off the plane and seeing | 2:14:55 | 2:14:57 | |
the place you had read and dreams
about. Seeing the whiteness, the | 2:14:57 | 2:15:02 | |
ice, the blue sky and the
endlessness of the sky, that is what | 2:15:02 | 2:15:06 | |
we have missed since we've been
home. You have beautiful blue sky | 2:15:06 | 2:15:10 | |
this morning but I imagine it's
quite a different scene! You | 2:15:10 | 2:15:14 | |
obviously had to train massively for
this, what was the toughest thing | 2:15:14 | 2:15:18 | |
about the training? | 2:15:18 | 2:15:20 | |
We did a three-week exercise out in
Norway, where we carried everything | 2:15:22 | 2:15:26 | |
that we needed to survive for those
three weeks, all of our tent | 2:15:26 | 2:15:31 | |
equipment and food. That was tough
but some of the hills are a lot | 2:15:31 | 2:15:35 | |
steeper than some of the stuff we
had in Antarctica, we really pushed | 2:15:35 | 2:15:39 | |
ourselves on that, so that we were
prepared when we went to Antarctica. | 2:15:39 | 2:15:42 | |
We talked a bit about the lovely
things, what was the toughest thing? | 2:15:42 | 2:15:48 | |
The cold, the wind! LAUGHTER
I think, for the team... One of the | 2:15:51 | 2:16:00 | |
toughest things was the mental side
of it. Because we had beautiful | 2:16:00 | 2:16:05 | |
skies, but every day was the same.
For 61 days, we had to get up and do | 2:16:05 | 2:16:10 | |
the same thing over and over.
Particularly at the very beginning | 2:16:10 | 2:16:13 | |
when we were delayed by the weather
for so long, it was that mental test | 2:16:13 | 2:16:19 | |
of, are we actually going to be able
to start and finish within the time | 2:16:19 | 2:16:23 | |
frame that we've got? That aside was
one of the hardest things for the | 2:16:23 | 2:16:28 | |
team. -- that side. Teamwork and
everything else is incredibly | 2:16:28 | 2:16:34 | |
important in that sort of
environment. | 2:16:34 | 2:16:37 | |
Definitely. I really felt that. I
was a bit ill at the start and was | 2:16:38 | 2:16:43 | |
unable, to one point, to pull my
weight so the girls had to take my | 2:16:43 | 2:16:47 | |
weight of me to allow me to
continue. Fortunately, I recovered | 2:16:47 | 2:16:52 | |
and carried on to finish the
expedition. Without that teamwork | 2:16:52 | 2:16:56 | |
and without being able to be so
honest with all of the team, I don't | 2:16:56 | 2:16:59 | |
think I would have made it through.
Definitely, the teamwork makes it | 2:16:59 | 2:17:05 | |
work. You talked a bit about it
being an all-female team. That is a | 2:17:05 | 2:17:09 | |
message you want to get across in
some ways, you want to encourage | 2:17:09 | 2:17:13 | |
other women into sport but perhaps
not this extreme, though? LAUGHTER | 2:17:13 | 2:17:18 | |
I mean maybe some will go this
extreme but it started off initially | 2:17:18 | 2:17:22 | |
as just encouraging women within the
military to get involved in | 2:17:22 | 2:17:27 | |
adventurous training and pushing
themselves mentally and physically. | 2:17:27 | 2:17:30 | |
But as it grew and more and more
people got interested and told me | 2:17:30 | 2:17:34 | |
they were being inspired by Ed, it
has expanded to not just women in | 2:17:34 | 2:17:39 | |
the military but outside. --
inspired by it. But men, women, boys | 2:17:39 | 2:17:45 | |
and girls, to find their Antarctica,
find something that pushes them | 2:17:45 | 2:17:48 | |
physically and mentally. This was
just to prove that none of us have | 2:17:48 | 2:17:55 | |
been to Antarctica before, but if
you put the right steps in place, | 2:17:55 | 2:17:58 | |
you can really achieve anything that
you want. It's wonderful to speak to | 2:17:58 | 2:18:03 | |
you, thank you. A beautiful day.
Thank you for joining us from | 2:18:03 | 2:18:06 | |
Sandhurst. | 2:18:06 | 2:18:08 | |
It looks absolutely gorgeous this
morning. Beautiful. John Maguire is | 2:18:10 | 2:18:14 | |
on Dartmoor, we will be there later
on but he was saying it is minus | 2:18:14 | 2:18:17 | |
two. | 2:18:17 | 2:18:18 | |
Here's Carol with a look
at this morning's weather. | 2:18:18 | 2:18:21 | |
Good morning. It's -5 in Northern
Ireland this morning, a cold but | 2:18:23 | 2:18:27 | |
beta. For many parts of the country.
Look at the forecast for this week, | 2:18:27 | 2:18:32 | |
it will stay cold through the week,
widespread frost, the risk of ice on | 2:18:32 | 2:18:36 | |
untreated surfaces and snow. This
holds true for today. We have seen | 2:18:36 | 2:18:41 | |
snow this morning and overnight.
This is a lovely Weather Watcher's | 2:18:41 | 2:18:46 | |
picture from Kent. Another one from
Kent shows the snow. This is in | 2:18:46 | 2:18:52 | |
Rainham. And one more from Kent. The
snow is not deep but it makes a | 2:18:52 | 2:18:57 | |
beautiful picture. It also means
tricky travelling conditions adding | 2:18:57 | 2:18:59 | |
in ice. Snow in Kent, Essex, Sussex,
East Anglia and eastern UK. There | 2:18:59 | 2:19:08 | |
are showers. Not all of us will see
snow showers but we will see some | 2:19:08 | 2:19:11 | |
pop up across the Midlands, Wales,
south-west England. Showers in | 2:19:11 | 2:19:17 | |
Scotland will also be snow showers.
A lot of dry weather as well. In the | 2:19:17 | 2:19:22 | |
afternoon, immune to the wintry
showers but if you catch one, it | 2:19:22 | 2:19:25 | |
will be lighter than this morning.
Still have a noticeable | 2:19:25 | 2:19:30 | |
north-easterly breeze. It makes it
feel particularly cold, colder than | 2:19:30 | 2:19:33 | |
the temperatures suggest. In the
afternoon, we could see a wintry | 2:19:33 | 2:19:38 | |
flurry or two in Devon and the odd
snow shower across Wales but most of | 2:19:38 | 2:19:42 | |
us won't, most will stay dry and
cold. Northern Ireland, the odd | 2:19:42 | 2:19:47 | |
shower but mostly dry. The cloud
will thicken with rain arriving | 2:19:47 | 2:19:51 | |
later. And thickening across western
Scotland with winds strengthening, | 2:19:51 | 2:19:55 | |
gale force later with exposure that
a lot of dry weather and the | 2:19:55 | 2:19:59 | |
sunshine but feeling cold. This
evening and overnight, the weather | 2:19:59 | 2:20:02 | |
front produces a band of rain, sleet
and snow which will continue to push | 2:20:02 | 2:20:10 | |
south-east. Behind it, colder air
comes in with wintry showers and the | 2:20:10 | 2:20:12 | |
risk of ice. Ahead of this weather
front, patchy fog forms. Inglot to | 2:20:12 | 2:20:17 | |
bear in mind first thing. The risk
of ice, fog and that will lift -- it | 2:20:17 | 2:20:21 | |
is a lot to bear in mind. It will
push steadily south-east. Through | 2:20:21 | 2:20:25 | |
the day, it will peter out in situ
and a band of cloud. Mostly the | 2:20:25 | 2:20:31 | |
showers will be rain. Building
towards the south-east. Behind it, | 2:20:31 | 2:20:35 | |
sunshine that you can still see lots
of wintry showers. Temperatures will | 2:20:35 | 2:20:39 | |
get through the evening and
overnight, this weather front, as it | 2:20:39 | 2:20:43 | |
runs into the cold air will
rejuvenate. Further wintry showers | 2:20:43 | 2:20:49 | |
across The Wash, East Anglia and the
Home Counties, London for example, | 2:20:49 | 2:20:53 | |
as it continues to push south-east.
There is the risk of Irish on | 2:20:53 | 2:20:56 | |
untreated surfaces. Tomorrow we lose
that weather from very readily, | 2:20:56 | 2:21:03 | |
high-pressure builds in, fairly
settled until the next set of | 2:21:03 | 2:21:06 | |
weather fronts. Frosty and icy start
with a fair bit of sunshine. Cloud | 2:21:06 | 2:21:10 | |
building from the west. As they
arrive in the west, they will be | 2:21:10 | 2:21:14 | |
preceded by some snow and then the
rain will come in. It will be windy | 2:21:14 | 2:21:18 | |
and behind those weather fronts
later in the day in the evening and | 2:21:18 | 2:21:21 | |
overnight, the risk of snow showers
and ice. | 2:21:21 | 2:21:29 | |
and ice. Long-term, are we going to
get a bit warmer next week? Further | 2:21:29 | 2:21:32 | |
beyond? Maybe a little bit but we're
not done with winter, this is not | 2:21:32 | 2:21:40 | |
unusual for winter. Expect more
colder winter before we are through | 2:21:40 | 2:21:45 | |
-- cold weather before winter is
through. She could have given me | 2:21:45 | 2:21:48 | |
some hope! Thank you. Tell it how it
is! Thank you. It is lovely, though. | 2:21:48 | 2:21:57 | |
We | 2:21:57 | 2:21:57 | |
is! Thank you. It is lovely, though.
We can show you. We will show you | 2:21:57 | 2:21:59 | |
some pictures John Maguire in
Dartmoor. | 2:21:59 | 2:22:06 | |
It looks just glorious. | 2:22:06 | 2:22:10 | |
It really does. Dartmoor is a
fantastically wild and wonderful | 2:22:12 | 2:22:16 | |
place. I've been coming here for
more than 30 years. It's | 2:22:16 | 2:22:19 | |
extraordinary. You will get a snowy
days, days where you can't see your | 2:22:19 | 2:22:23 | |
hand in front of your face because
of the cloud and fog but just look | 2:22:23 | 2:22:27 | |
at it. It is resplendent, majestic.
The colours are extraordinary. All | 2:22:27 | 2:22:34 | |
of the different colours of the more
and he has changed as the sun has | 2:22:34 | 2:22:38 | |
come up. That is what we can see,
that is what your eye tells you. You | 2:22:38 | 2:22:43 | |
would take photos if you came here.
But what does the play sound like? | 2:22:43 | 2:22:49 | |
There will be a new community radio
station being set up to achieve | 2:22:49 | 2:22:57 | |
exactly that called Skylark. The
organisers say this will be their | 2:22:57 | 2:23:00 | |
studio, Dartmoor will be their
studio. It will be the sounds of | 2:23:00 | 2:23:04 | |
this place that he will be able to
listen to. Good morning. You have | 2:23:04 | 2:23:08 | |
been out and about this morning.
INTERFERENCE tell me about the | 2:23:08 | 2:23:15 | |
programming. It sounds very
different... INTERFERENCE STUDIO: | 2:23:15 | 2:23:21 | |
That's so disappointing! What he was
trying to tell you is that they will | 2:23:21 | 2:23:24 | |
have this radio station and on it,
you will hear the beautiful sounds. | 2:23:24 | 2:23:30 | |
Shall we try again?... Of Dartmoor.
Can we picked up that interview? How | 2:23:30 | 2:23:37 | |
disappointing. It looked so
gorgeous. We will try to | 2:23:37 | 2:23:41 | |
re-establish things. Can you hear
us? I can, can you hear me. Let's | 2:23:41 | 2:23:47 | |
try again, we lost you momentarily.
Sorry about that, I was waxing | 2:23:47 | 2:23:50 | |
lyrical. It's because we are
surrounded by granite, that is | 2:23:50 | 2:23:56 | |
probably what is causing problems.
I'm not sure how far we got. There | 2:23:56 | 2:24:00 | |
will be a new community station
called Skylark that will bring you | 2:24:00 | 2:24:04 | |
the sounds of Dartmoor. Tell us what
a day listening to Skylark would be | 2:24:04 | 2:24:11 | |
like? Very different to what we
normally expect to radio? Exactly, | 2:24:11 | 2:24:18 | |
no conventional programmes, no fixed
studio location, presenter, traffic, | 2:24:18 | 2:24:22 | |
weather updates, that kind of thing.
But instead a continuous Kailash of | 2:24:22 | 2:24:27 | |
sound all recorded on Dartmoor. We
will hear beautiful sounds of | 2:24:27 | 2:24:32 | |
nature, people will talk about their
lives. And maybe also some songs | 2:24:32 | 2:24:36 | |
they are singing in the landscape.
Lots of different things all | 2:24:36 | 2:24:41 | |
recorded right here. Thank you.
Let's talk to Tony Whitehead who has | 2:24:41 | 2:24:46 | |
been doing some recording, good
morning. | 2:24:46 | 2:24:48 | |
As I was saying, I am not sure
whether people at home heard it or | 2:24:50 | 2:24:53 | |
not because we had problems with the
signal, we are used to coming up and | 2:24:53 | 2:24:57 | |
taking a photo but you would never
think of recording sound. You | 2:24:57 | 2:25:01 | |
wouldn't. It's an amazing place,
Dartmoor is full of sound, the | 2:25:01 | 2:25:05 | |
landscape scenes. But if some of the
things we want to capture with this | 2:25:05 | 2:25:09 | |
-- the landscape hum. We want to get
the sounds of this landscape out | 2:25:09 | 2:25:15 | |
there. And to get those sounds
recorded by people who live here, | 2:25:15 | 2:25:19 | |
people from the communities. Getting
them involved, Skilling them up and | 2:25:19 | 2:25:23 | |
had to make radio, everybody in this
community can be radio makers. | 2:25:23 | 2:25:27 | |
People will be able to make their
own radio documentaries? They can | 2:25:27 | 2:25:31 | |
make their own content, absolutely.
We think we have a lot of interest | 2:25:31 | 2:25:36 | |
in this area for people to do that.
To really celebrate the soundscape | 2:25:36 | 2:25:41 | |
of Dartmoor. Good stuff. Lucinda,
nothing in life is free. If you | 2:25:41 | 2:25:48 | |
don't have advertisers and you don't
have a license fee like the BBC | 2:25:48 | 2:25:52 | |
does, how will you pay for it? We
are looking for funding, we will | 2:25:52 | 2:25:56 | |
apply for grants, working in
partnership with lots of other | 2:25:56 | 2:25:58 | |
organisations and we will do fun
things like wonderful holidays | 2:25:58 | 2:26:02 | |
people can come to to work with us
and that will help fund the project. | 2:26:02 | 2:26:06 | |
It is important that everybody in
the community has a voice through | 2:26:06 | 2:26:09 | |
this project and that people can
meet one another, learn from one | 2:26:09 | 2:26:13 | |
another and we feel that will enrich
people's lives, especially if they | 2:26:13 | 2:26:17 | |
are very isolated, living on
Dartmoor. It is important that we | 2:26:17 | 2:26:20 | |
reach out to them and they can be
involved as fully as possible. Thank | 2:26:20 | 2:26:25 | |
you, thank you for braving the wind
and the temperature and the | 2:26:25 | 2:26:28 | |
technical issues. Back in the
studio, warm studio, I know you have | 2:26:28 | 2:26:34 | |
both done quite a lot of radio. We
talk about radio in painting | 2:26:34 | 2:26:38 | |
pictures with words. When you think
of that concept, is there a better | 2:26:38 | 2:26:43 | |
canvas than this? Dartmoor itself. | 2:26:43 | 2:26:46 | |
STUDIO: There really isn't, it is
absolutely beautiful, thank you. | 2:26:47 | 2:26:52 | |
We could stare at that for hours. It
is gorgeous. They should not just | 2:26:52 | 2:26:58 | |
have the radio station that the TV
as well. | 2:26:58 | 2:27:00 | |
Time now to get the news,
travel and weather where you are. | 2:27:00 | 2:27:02 | |
Can we give five more seconds of
Dartmoor? Apparently not! Just | 2:27:02 | 2:27:08 | |
rewind your mind a little bit, have
that beautiful vision of Dartmoor, | 2:27:08 | 2:27:12 | |
we should be back with more in two
or three minutes. | 2:27:12 | 2:30:35 | |
It feels pretty cold out there now! | 2:30:35 | 2:30:38 | |
I'm back with the latest
from the BBC London | 2:30:38 | 2:30:40 | |
newsroom in half an hour. | 2:30:40 | 2:30:44 | |
Hello, this is Breakfast
with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin. | 2:30:44 | 2:30:50 | |
Will have all the sport in a few
moments but first the main news | 2:30:50 | 2:30:54 | |
stories of the day. | 2:30:54 | 2:30:57 | |
The EU's chief negotiator,
Michel Barnier, will be | 2:30:57 | 2:30:59 | |
in Downing Street today for talks
about a possible transitional period | 2:30:59 | 2:31:01 | |
after Britain leaves the EU. | 2:31:01 | 2:31:02 | |
He'll meet the Brexit Secretary
David Davis in the first of a series | 2:31:02 | 2:31:05 | |
of discussions this week. | 2:31:05 | 2:31:07 | |
It comes after the Government
indicated it remains determined | 2:31:07 | 2:31:09 | |
to leave the European Customs Union
when Brexit takes place next year. | 2:31:09 | 2:31:13 | |
A new ring-fenced tax to fund
the NHS and social care in England | 2:31:13 | 2:31:16 | |
has been proposed by a panel
of health experts. | 2:31:16 | 2:31:19 | |
The panel, set up by
the Liberal Democrats, | 2:31:19 | 2:31:27 | |
says the NHS in England should be
given an extra £4 billion. | 2:31:27 | 2:31:30 | |
The government says it prioritsed
NHS funding at the last Budget, | 2:31:30 | 2:31:32 | |
providing £2 billion
for social care. | 2:31:32 | 2:31:37 | |
In the last half hour
the Chief Executive of Ryan Air has | 2:31:37 | 2:31:40 | |
warned of strikes which could
cause travel disruption | 2:31:40 | 2:31:42 | |
over the Easter period. | 2:31:42 | 2:31:43 | |
Michael O'Leary says talks
between pilot unions and Europe's | 2:31:43 | 2:31:45 | |
biggest airline have broken down. | 2:31:45 | 2:31:48 | |
You might remember the airline
was forced to cancel tens | 2:31:48 | 2:31:51 | |
of thousand of flights last Autumn
following issues with its leave | 2:31:51 | 2:31:54 | |
booking system and has been in talks
over staff terms and conditions. | 2:31:54 | 2:32:01 | |
In the last half hour,
the man who was described | 2:32:01 | 2:32:04 | |
as Europe's most wanted has gone
on trial in Belgium. | 2:32:04 | 2:32:06 | |
Salah Abdeslam is thought to be
the last surviving suspect | 2:32:06 | 2:32:09 | |
of the Paris attacks in 2015. | 2:32:09 | 2:32:13 | |
These are life pictures of his
arrival at court. -- live pictures. | 2:32:13 | 2:32:23 | |
He faces charges relating
to a shootout he had with police | 2:32:23 | 2:32:25 | |
while on the run in Belgium. | 2:32:25 | 2:32:27 | |
A second trial relating
to his involvement in the Paris | 2:32:27 | 2:32:29 | |
attacks will be held
at a later date. | 2:32:29 | 2:32:33 | |
At the begining of what forecasters
say could be one of the coldest | 2:32:33 | 2:32:36 | |
weeks of the winter,
snow has led to a series | 2:32:36 | 2:32:39 | |
of accidents in Kent. | 2:32:39 | 2:32:40 | |
This was the footage taken
by the police as they attended | 2:32:40 | 2:32:42 | |
Incidents on the M20
where there were | 2:32:42 | 2:32:44 | |
a number of crashes. | 2:32:44 | 2:32:50 | |
Luckily no one was seriously
injured and the motorway | 2:32:50 | 2:32:52 | |
has now been cleared. | 2:32:52 | 2:32:53 | |
A number of train services have
also been disrupted. | 2:32:53 | 2:32:58 | |
The BBC Radio 2 presenter Zoe Ball
has revealed she will be the latest | 2:32:58 | 2:33:02 | |
in a long line of well known faces
to take on a gruelling physical | 2:33:02 | 2:33:05 | |
challenge for sports relief,
which takes place between the 17th | 2:33:05 | 2:33:07 | |
and the 23rd March. | 2:33:07 | 2:33:08 | |
She's training for a cycling
marathon to raise money | 2:33:08 | 2:33:11 | |
for mental health causes. | 2:33:11 | 2:33:14 | |
Earlier, she told us why it's
an issue that's close to her heart. | 2:33:14 | 2:33:22 | |
I think lots of people will know
that I lost my boyfriend last year | 2:33:23 | 2:33:28 | |
who suffered from depression for a
very long time. I was really touched | 2:33:28 | 2:33:32 | |
and moved by the amount of people
who got in touch with me who have | 2:33:32 | 2:33:35 | |
been through the same or are living
with the same issues. I think | 2:33:35 | 2:33:40 | |
everybody knows that mental health
resources are under huge pressure | 2:33:40 | 2:33:44 | |
and there's a lot of people who are
not necessarily getting the support | 2:33:44 | 2:33:49 | |
that they need in time. | 2:33:49 | 2:33:52 | |
We will follow her challenge here on
BBC Breakfast. We know it's going to | 2:33:52 | 2:33:57 | |
be pretty epic and she follows in
the footsteps of Divina McCall, | 2:33:57 | 2:34:02 | |
David Walliams and other incredible
sporting achievements -- Davina | 2:34:02 | 2:34:07 | |
McCall. Greg James is also doing
another ridiculous challenge for | 2:34:07 | 2:34:14 | |
radio one. | 2:34:14 | 2:34:19 | |
Another sporting challenge because
Holly is here! I'm here on time! | 2:34:19 | 2:34:29 | |
You've got about 45 seconds!
LAUGHTER Will have the weather in | 2:34:29 | 2:34:37 | |
ten minutes. And life after sport,
we hear from players and athletes | 2:34:37 | 2:34:43 | |
struggling after retirement. | 2:34:43 | 2:34:48 | |
To mark the 100th anniversary
of women's suffrage. | 2:34:49 | 2:34:51 | |
The Secret Life of Five-Year-Olds
returns with a special | 2:34:51 | 2:34:54 | |
All Girls edition -
two of the show's young stars | 2:34:54 | 2:34:55 | |
will be here on the sofa giving
us their unique take | 2:34:55 | 2:34:58 | |
on what it is like to
be a woman in 2018. | 2:34:58 | 2:35:05 | |
I think this is my first oyster. | 2:35:06 | 2:35:11 | |
Find out how the Ellis family got
on taking part in a time-travelling | 2:35:11 | 2:35:14 | |
adventure around the kitchen table
to experience what life | 2:35:14 | 2:35:16 | |
was like for working-class families
over the past 100 years. | 2:35:16 | 2:35:24 | |
It looks like the food didn't go
well. Guess who's here with the | 2:35:24 | 2:35:31 | |
sport! LAUGHTER I was so excited
about the Super Bowl I wanted to get | 2:35:31 | 2:35:37 | |
you an earlier in the programme.
It's national sickie day, I feel | 2:35:37 | 2:35:45 | |
there could be a few sickies today.
A lot of people every year say they | 2:35:45 | 2:35:50 | |
are going to sit up the Super Bowl
but some don't make it to the very | 2:35:50 | 2:35:53 | |
end. It's long game. A lot of people
booked the day off because they know | 2:35:53 | 2:35:59 | |
they are going to stay up. | 2:35:59 | 2:36:05 | |
It was a very exciting game. It came
down to the last seconds. The people | 2:36:05 | 2:36:10 | |
who don't follow the sport
throughout the year, it's got the | 2:36:10 | 2:36:15 | |
atmosphere, the razzmatazz, what
else do you want? Justin Timberlake! | 2:36:15 | 2:36:21 | |
Into the final seconds it was an
incredible game. | 2:36:21 | 2:36:24 | |
There'll be plenty of partying
in Philly right now | 2:36:24 | 2:36:26 | |
with the Philadelphia Eagles winning
the Super Bowl for | 2:36:26 | 2:36:29 | |
the very first time. | 2:36:29 | 2:36:30 | |
They beat the favourites
and defending champions | 2:36:30 | 2:36:31 | |
the New England Patriots
in what was a thrilling | 2:36:31 | 2:36:34 | |
high scoring game. | 2:36:34 | 2:36:35 | |
Let's look at the touchdown
they're saying will be | 2:36:35 | 2:36:37 | |
shown a billion times -
Nick Foles - the hero of the night - | 2:36:37 | 2:36:40 | |
becoming the first quarterback
to throw and catch touchdowns | 2:36:40 | 2:36:42 | |
in Super Bowl history. | 2:36:42 | 2:36:44 | |
He only came into the side
towards the end of the season | 2:36:44 | 2:36:47 | |
as an injury replacement. | 2:36:47 | 2:36:54 | |
That's what life is about right
there. We are Super Bowl champions. | 2:36:54 | 2:37:01 | |
Time stops. | 2:37:01 | 2:37:02 | |
I get to celebrate this
with my wife and daughter. | 2:37:02 | 2:37:05 | |
She has been there through
everything, so has my family. | 2:37:05 | 2:37:07 | |
To celebrate this moment,
that is what it is about. | 2:37:07 | 2:37:10 | |
I am just grateful, you know? | 2:37:10 | 2:37:18 | |
Let me hear you Minneapolis!
CHEERING | 2:37:22 | 2:37:25 | |
MUSIC | 2:37:25 | 2:37:28 | |
And as always the half-time
show is what everyone's | 2:37:28 | 2:37:30 | |
been talking about -
as Justin Timberlake | 2:37:30 | 2:37:32 | |
wowed the crowds. | 2:37:32 | 2:37:33 | |
In a 12 minute performance that
included a tribute to Prince - | 2:37:33 | 2:37:36 | |
he ended up in the
middle of the crowd. | 2:37:36 | 2:37:38 | |
Among them was a 13-year-old boy
who may just be the most popular | 2:37:38 | 2:37:41 | |
person in his school today -
bagging a selfie with the star. | 2:37:41 | 2:37:44 | |
And we've managed to
track down that selfie - | 2:37:44 | 2:37:46 | |
this is 13-year-old Ryan McKenna -
as it being 2018, it didn't take | 2:37:46 | 2:37:49 | |
long for memes of Ryan to go viral
while he stood there with his mobile | 2:37:49 | 2:37:53 | |
phone waiting to take that photo. | 2:37:53 | 2:37:54 | |
What a selfie to get though! | 2:37:54 | 2:37:59 | |
Closer to home - what a start
to the Six Nations this weekend - | 2:37:59 | 2:38:03 | |
after Wales stunning victory over
Scotland and that last minute drop | 2:38:03 | 2:38:05 | |
goal in Ireland's win over France -
yesterday it was England's turn | 2:38:05 | 2:38:08 | |
as they began their
defence of the title. | 2:38:08 | 2:38:10 | |
Their opener against Italy saw
them run in seven tries | 2:38:10 | 2:38:13 | |
for a bonus point win. | 2:38:13 | 2:38:14 | |
What a debut for Sam Simmonds
though with two tries. | 2:38:14 | 2:38:19 | |
46-15 the final score in Rome. | 2:38:19 | 2:38:25 | |
In the women's Six Nations got
underway this weekend too - | 2:38:25 | 2:38:27 | |
England put in a huge performance
yesterday - beating Italy | 2:38:27 | 2:38:30 | |
42-7. | 2:38:30 | 2:38:31 | |
England Captain Sarah Hunter went
over for a hat-trick of tries | 2:38:31 | 2:38:33 | |
helping her team secure
the bonus point. | 2:38:33 | 2:38:38 | |
An absolutely amazing game
at Anfield yesterday then. | 2:38:38 | 2:38:40 | |
In case you missed it,
we had two injury time goals, | 2:38:40 | 2:38:43 | |
two Spurs penalties. | 2:38:43 | 2:38:45 | |
Harry Kane missed the first but made
up for it in the second | 2:38:45 | 2:38:48 | |
to give him his 100th
Premier League goal. | 2:38:48 | 2:38:51 | |
And before any of that came one
of the goals of the season. | 2:38:51 | 2:38:55 | |
Substitute Victor Wanyama
smashing home an equaliser | 2:38:55 | 2:38:57 | |
with ten minutes to go. | 2:38:57 | 2:39:00 | |
That cancelled out Mo Salah's
earlier strike, only | 2:39:00 | 2:39:04 | |
for the Egyptian to score this
brilliant goal at the end. | 2:39:04 | 2:39:07 | |
But there was still time
for a second Spurs penalty - | 2:39:07 | 2:39:10 | |
the linesman deemed this
a foul on Eric Lamela. | 2:39:10 | 2:39:14 | |
Kane had one saved a few
minutes before, but made up | 2:39:14 | 2:39:17 | |
for it with the second -
in the 95th minute! | 2:39:17 | 2:39:19 | |
A controversial 2-2 draw -
with Liverpool's Virgil Van Djyk | 2:39:19 | 2:39:24 | |
accusing Kane of misleading
the referee to win the first penalty | 2:39:24 | 2:39:28 | |
- Kane made his position clear
speaking directly to the camera | 2:39:28 | 2:39:31 | |
afterwards said "You can't
give me two tries.". | 2:39:31 | 2:39:35 | |
Speaking of diving, we've had some
news this morning ahead | 2:39:35 | 2:39:38 | |
of the Commonwealth Games later this
year - the diving squad | 2:39:38 | 2:39:40 | |
has been revealed -
and two of them joined us | 2:39:40 | 2:39:43 | |
on Breakfast this morning. | 2:39:43 | 2:39:44 | |
Jack Laugher and Chris Mears won
Great Britain's first Olympic | 2:39:44 | 2:39:46 | |
diving gold medal in Rio. | 2:39:46 | 2:39:48 | |
And now they will be heading
to the Gold Coast in Australia | 2:39:48 | 2:39:51 | |
in April as part of a team of 13. | 2:39:51 | 2:39:53 | |
They are defending their
Commonwealth title as well | 2:39:53 | 2:39:55 | |
and they told us earlier that
they're constantly | 2:39:55 | 2:39:57 | |
trying to improve. | 2:39:57 | 2:40:04 | |
We are still working on our
signature dive, the 42 and a half | 2:40:04 | 2:40:10 | |
somersault with three twists. The
one that separated us from the pack | 2:40:10 | 2:40:14 | |
at the Rio Olympics Rayleigh.
There's always work to be done. We | 2:40:14 | 2:40:17 | |
are always working on fine tuning
the dives. Tom Daley is in that | 2:40:17 | 2:40:22 | |
squad as well heading to the Gold
Coast. England topped the table last | 2:40:22 | 2:40:26 | |
time so there will be high hopes, if
you | 2:40:26 | 2:40:29 | |
excuse the pun! They obviously spend
so much time with each other both | 2:40:29 | 2:40:34 | |
professionally and personally. Their
ability to finish each other's | 2:40:34 | 2:40:38 | |
sentences, they never even looked at
each other did they! LAUGHTER They | 2:40:38 | 2:40:43 | |
say they are best friends so I think
that is part of it. Good luck to | 2:40:43 | 2:40:46 | |
them. | 2:40:46 | 2:40:47 | |
Sticking with a similar theme... | 2:40:47 | 2:40:51 | |
Being a professional
sportsperson is a career that | 2:40:51 | 2:40:53 | |
most can only dream of. | 2:40:53 | 2:40:54 | |
It can bring wealth,
adulation and glory. | 2:40:54 | 2:40:56 | |
But when it's all over,
it can be difficult to adjusting | 2:40:56 | 2:40:59 | |
back to a so called "normal" life. | 2:40:59 | 2:41:00 | |
A survey by the Professional Players
Federation has found more than half | 2:41:00 | 2:41:03 | |
of the 800 former sportspeople
who responded said they had problems | 2:41:03 | 2:41:06 | |
with their mental or physical health
following retirement. | 2:41:06 | 2:41:08 | |
Azi Farni has more. | 2:41:08 | 2:41:12 | |
COMMENTATOR: Kelly Holmes
for Great Britain! | 2:41:12 | 2:41:14 | |
What a performance. | 2:41:14 | 2:41:16 | |
You are the double Olympic
champion, Kelly Holmes. | 2:41:16 | 2:41:19 | |
To be Olympic champion aged
34, I'd achieved it. | 2:41:19 | 2:41:23 | |
Suddenly, I had no idea who I was,
what I wanted to be. | 2:41:23 | 2:41:26 | |
The biggest thing that I felt
was the loss of identity, | 2:41:26 | 2:41:29 | |
and kind of purpose. | 2:41:29 | 2:41:33 | |
As an athlete, Dame
Kelly Holmes had it all. | 2:41:33 | 2:41:35 | |
Success, structure, support. | 2:41:35 | 2:41:38 | |
For many like Holmes,
their sporting lives are mapped out. | 2:41:38 | 2:41:41 | |
But come retirement,
all of that disappears. | 2:41:41 | 2:41:45 | |
I'd always been able
to say I was an Olympian, | 2:41:45 | 2:41:47 | |
an Olympic athlete,
or an international athlete. | 2:41:47 | 2:41:49 | |
Suddenly I'm having to reel off
lots of places that I go, | 2:41:49 | 2:41:52 | |
or roles that I have to play,
and it made me feel a little | 2:41:52 | 2:41:56 | |
bit, sort of, lost. | 2:41:56 | 2:41:59 | |
Among her many post-athletics
ventures, Dame Kelly Holmes | 2:41:59 | 2:42:01 | |
opened this cafe in her
hometown of Hildenborough. | 2:42:01 | 2:42:04 | |
Its name comes after her running
number when she won | 2:42:04 | 2:42:06 | |
double Olympic gold. | 2:42:06 | 2:42:09 | |
But what about the transition
to life after sport, | 2:42:09 | 2:42:11 | |
when you don't have gold medals
to look back on? | 2:42:11 | 2:42:14 | |
Former England rugby union captain
Catherine Spencer played | 2:42:14 | 2:42:16 | |
in two World Cup finals. | 2:42:16 | 2:42:20 | |
She lost both, retired,
and then watched as her team-mates | 2:42:20 | 2:42:22 | |
lifted the trophy in 2014. | 2:42:22 | 2:42:26 | |
I probably, every day,
at some point during the day, | 2:42:26 | 2:42:29 | |
I'll think about it. | 2:42:29 | 2:42:31 | |
I'll think about not
winning the World Cup. | 2:42:31 | 2:42:33 | |
I was absolutely devastated,
I was completely gutted that this | 2:42:33 | 2:42:35 | |
hadn't happened four years earlier. | 2:42:35 | 2:42:39 | |
It was so hard to watch. | 2:42:39 | 2:42:40 | |
I mean, it's taken me six or seven
years to start to feel comfortable | 2:42:40 | 2:42:44 | |
about my retirement. | 2:42:44 | 2:42:46 | |
I've been retired now for 12 years,
and I can honestly say it's only | 2:42:46 | 2:42:49 | |
in the past year and a half,
or two years, that I've got | 2:42:49 | 2:42:55 | |
into my head that I think,
do you know what, I know who I am | 2:42:55 | 2:42:58 | |
and who I want to be. | 2:42:58 | 2:43:00 | |
In fact, more than half of the 800
former professional sports people | 2:43:00 | 2:43:02 | |
who replied to a survey
by the Professional Players | 2:43:02 | 2:43:05 | |
Federation said they had had
concerns about their mental | 2:43:05 | 2:43:07 | |
or emotional well-being
since retiring. | 2:43:07 | 2:43:11 | |
But whose responsibility is it
to help them transition? | 2:43:11 | 2:43:15 | |
Should governing bodies
help at this time? | 2:43:15 | 2:43:17 | |
Yes, because we have seen so much
of what we're talking about now, | 2:43:17 | 2:43:20 | |
the detrimental effects of sport,
and you don't want a negative, | 2:43:20 | 2:43:24 | |
because sport should be the best
thing anyone has in their life. | 2:43:24 | 2:43:29 | |
And with three global sporting
championships coming up | 2:43:29 | 2:43:32 | |
in the next three months,
the challenge across sport may not | 2:43:32 | 2:43:34 | |
just be winning more medals. | 2:43:34 | 2:43:37 | |
Azi Farni, BBC News. | 2:43:37 | 2:43:44 | |
We are going to talk about that now. | 2:43:44 | 2:43:50 | |
Let's talk about this in more detail
now with Leon Lloyd, | 2:43:50 | 2:43:52 | |
a retired England rugby union
player, and Crista Cullen who's | 2:43:52 | 2:43:55 | |
a gold medal-winning
England hockey player. | 2:43:55 | 2:43:56 | |
Good morning. As we were watching
that we were talking about the | 2:43:56 | 2:43:59 | |
impact particularly, for example you
retired, went back and then got a | 2:43:59 | 2:44:03 | |
gold medal. It's an extraordinary
turn of events. Absolutely. In 2012, | 2:44:03 | 2:44:10 | |
it came and went the London
Olympics. I thought it would be the | 2:44:10 | 2:44:13 | |
best thing I would ever experience.
We got bronze as GB women. I went | 2:44:13 | 2:44:18 | |
back to Africa to pursue my huge
passion of conservation. In 2015I | 2:44:18 | 2:44:25 | |
got a phone call from the Olympic
coach inviting me to come back. I | 2:44:25 | 2:44:28 | |
never thought I'd get another
opportunity to have another bite at | 2:44:28 | 2:44:32 | |
the cherry. I trained for ten months
and was part of an amazing team that | 2:44:32 | 2:44:37 | |
went on to win gold in Rio is a very
special. Leon, from your | 2:44:37 | 2:44:43 | |
perspective, we see some footage
from the Rio Olympics from two | 2:44:43 | 2:44:48 | |
summers ago. When you were preparing
yourself for life after rugby, that | 2:44:48 | 2:44:52 | |
was something you thought about but
did it in anyway prepare you for | 2:44:52 | 2:44:57 | |
when it actually happened? It
hadn't. I'd read all the statistics | 2:44:57 | 2:45:01 | |
about people going bankrupt and
divorces and those sort of things | 2:45:01 | 2:45:04 | |
which were quite scary. I tried to
put things in place to make a | 2:45:04 | 2:45:08 | |
seamless transition across. There
were things I weren't aware such as | 2:45:08 | 2:45:12 | |
being part of 18, a close knit team
since the age of 16, being told | 2:45:12 | 2:45:17 | |
where to wear for that period of
time. All of a sudden I'm no longer | 2:45:17 | 2:45:21 | |
part of that team and I'm out in the
real world on my own so that was | 2:45:21 | 2:45:25 | |
quite difficult. What sort of impact
did it have on you? I went within | 2:45:25 | 2:45:32 | |
myself a bit. I thought I had
prepared properly and bought my | 2:45:32 | 2:45:36 | |
team-mates thought I'd prepared as
well. I was quite vocal and visible | 2:45:36 | 2:45:39 | |
doing that. I was in my shell a bit
and didn't talk. I drank a bit and I | 2:45:39 | 2:45:47 | |
did all these different things which
I'd read about beforehand but | 2:45:47 | 2:45:50 | |
thought I'd put in place things to
prevent them. What was finishing | 2:45:50 | 2:45:55 | |
second time around like her to the
first time? It's nice that did it | 2:45:55 | 2:45:59 | |
twice, and I learned from the first
time. Not everyone has that luxury. | 2:45:59 | 2:46:03 | |
The first transition I went home to
Africa and physics months I | 2:46:03 | 2:46:07 | |
completely agree, you're a bit lost.
It's an identity searching mission | 2:46:07 | 2:46:11 | |
that we go on. | 2:46:11 | 2:46:20 | |
Surrounded by team-mates and Acer
bought network, you are isolated. | 2:46:20 | 2:46:25 | |
You are off and thinking, what next?
We enjoyed being in a challenging | 2:46:25 | 2:46:31 | |
environment, and you are thinking,
what is the next thing I am aiming | 2:46:31 | 2:46:35 | |
for? Second time around in the
build-up to Rigo, I always worked | 2:46:35 | 2:46:39 | |
through my elite athlete career,
like Lyon, I thought to be | 2:46:39 | 2:46:44 | |
organised, knowing I had a career
afterwards. Doing better helped, but | 2:46:44 | 2:46:49 | |
being organised and having | 2:46:49 | 2:46:54 | |
being organised and having won by,
and I on life after sport. | 2:46:56 | 2:46:59 | |
Transitioning to realise individual
needs. We talk about it a lot more, | 2:46:59 | 2:47:06 | |
about psychology and being offered
help in sport and how that can help | 2:47:06 | 2:47:09 | |
with winning. Just thinking more
about the future and beyond. One of | 2:47:09 | 2:47:15 | |
the things mentioned was life after
sport, and if you mention that to an | 2:47:15 | 2:47:21 | |
athlete, they think about it further
down the line. Working on life | 2:47:21 | 2:47:25 | |
outside of sport and not seeing it
as a plan B, the more you do that, | 2:47:25 | 2:47:32 | |
research shows that the more
perspective you have inside and | 2:47:32 | 2:47:36 | |
outside sport, the better the
transition, and the better athlete | 2:47:36 | 2:47:40 | |
you are. As a professional sports
person, your career can end quickly | 2:47:40 | 2:47:45 | |
through injury, or someone can tell
you, do you know what, somebody is | 2:47:45 | 2:47:49 | |
better than you, you are off.
Sometimes you are not in control. | 2:47:49 | 2:47:54 | |
Not at all. Many peers and
team-mates went out at the top at | 2:47:54 | 2:48:00 | |
the right time, and most of us, time
was cold by somebody is, a surgeon | 2:48:00 | 2:48:08 | |
or physio, or a contract not
renewed. You have a gold medal, but | 2:48:08 | 2:48:17 | |
people training for that did not get
picked in the team. That has to be a | 2:48:17 | 2:48:21 | |
tough thing to deal with.
Absolutely. As a hockey player, we | 2:48:21 | 2:48:27 | |
showed momentum through the Olympics
and the team element. You forget | 2:48:27 | 2:48:32 | |
that is 16 players that are lucky to
be selected. We were a 31 man strong | 2:48:32 | 2:48:40 | |
squad, committed for four years in
the build-up to the Olympic Games. | 2:48:40 | 2:48:44 | |
15 players got the tap on the
shoulder all the news that we hate | 2:48:44 | 2:48:47 | |
to receive. Possibly, we are young
enough to carry on, or possibly had | 2:48:47 | 2:48:54 | |
to transition and make other plans.
It is not always easy. Thank you for | 2:48:54 | 2:49:01 | |
talking to us.
Hopefully, that has helped somebody | 2:49:01 | 2:49:06 | |
this morning in the same position,
talking about these issues, and not | 2:49:06 | 2:49:12 | |
making the mistakes that others have
made. Thank you very much. | 2:49:12 | 2:49:17 | |
8:40 nine. It is cold outside,
Dartmoor is beautiful and cold. We | 2:49:17 | 2:49:24 | |
will be silent for a couple of
moments. There will be a new radio | 2:49:24 | 2:49:30 | |
station that will have the sound of
Dartmoor. Here is a preview. | 2:49:30 | 2:49:37 | |
That sounds nice. | 2:49:44 | 2:49:50 | |
It sounds windy. | 2:49:50 | 2:49:54 | |
Here's Carol with a look
at this morning's weather. | 2:49:54 | 2:50:01 | |
There is a fair bit of whether a
round. Good morning, all. We have | 2:50:01 | 2:50:07 | |
ice around, a frosty start to the
day, sunshine and snow. That sums up | 2:50:07 | 2:50:12 | |
the forecast for the week. It will
remain cold with widespread frost | 2:50:12 | 2:50:16 | |
and ice. We have snow across Kent,
Sussex, Essex, East Anglia and a few | 2:50:16 | 2:50:24 | |
snow showers coming up the east
coast of England. Away from that, | 2:50:24 | 2:50:29 | |
dry weather around, sunshine and we
could see wintry showers developed | 2:50:29 | 2:50:33 | |
today across Devon, for example, one
or two in the Midlands, and also | 2:50:33 | 2:50:38 | |
Wales. For Northern Ireland, mostly
dry until later. Cloud will thicken | 2:50:38 | 2:50:42 | |
in the west. In Scotland, rain
coming our way with strengthening | 2:50:42 | 2:50:47 | |
winds, much of Scotland dry and
sunny, and cold. Any showers will be | 2:50:47 | 2:50:52 | |
wintry. North-west England is the
same, dry, sunny and cold. In the | 2:50:52 | 2:50:57 | |
afternoon, not immune to showers.
There will be wintry mess around. | 2:50:57 | 2:51:05 | |
The breeze accentuates the cold
feel. In the southern counties, dry | 2:51:05 | 2:51:10 | |
weather. Don't forget, wintry
conditions in Devon. Most of us will | 2:51:10 | 2:51:16 | |
have a dry and sunny, cold day. This
evening and overnight, as the | 2:51:16 | 2:51:22 | |
weather front producing the rain
sinks south, it will turn to snow | 2:51:22 | 2:51:27 | |
across Scotland, Northern Ireland,
northern England and Wales. Wintry | 2:51:27 | 2:51:30 | |
showers coming in behind. The risk
of ice anywhere. Ahead of a weather | 2:51:30 | 2:51:36 | |
front, patchy fog forming across the
Midlands. If we pick up the weather | 2:51:36 | 2:51:41 | |
front tomorrow, it continues its
journey moving south eastwards. As | 2:51:41 | 2:51:45 | |
temperatures rise, the snow risk
decreases for a time. Heavy showers | 2:51:45 | 2:51:50 | |
might have a wintry element to it.
Cloud will build further south am a | 2:51:50 | 2:51:54 | |
and a bright start. Another cold
day, and a good rash of showers in | 2:51:54 | 2:52:02 | |
the north and west. Through the
evening, temperatures dip in the | 2:52:02 | 2:52:06 | |
overnight period. The weather front
will rejuvenate. It engages with the | 2:52:06 | 2:52:10 | |
cold air again and the showers
turned back to smoke across The Wash | 2:52:10 | 2:52:15 | |
and through East Anglia, London and
the Home Counties, pushing into the | 2:52:15 | 2:52:19 | |
south-east. There will be cold
weather, the risk of ice, but these | 2:52:19 | 2:52:24 | |
are showers. Not all of us will see
them. Through Tuesday to Wednesday, | 2:52:24 | 2:52:29 | |
we lose the weather front,
high-pressure topples in, settles | 2:52:29 | 2:52:32 | |
the weather down for a time. All
these weather fronts come our way. | 2:52:32 | 2:52:37 | |
We start with a cold and frosty note
with sunshine, cloud from the west | 2:52:37 | 2:52:41 | |
ahead of the weather front. We will
see snow, and it turns back to rain. | 2:52:41 | 2:52:48 | |
In the evening, snow comes in
behind, and the risk of ice. The | 2:52:48 | 2:52:51 | |
cold weather continues as we go
through this week. | 2:52:51 | 2:52:59 | |
Thank you, Carol. See you tomorrow. | 2:52:59 | 2:53:05 | |
Watching a group of five-year-olds
might not seem like the most obvious | 2:53:05 | 2:53:08 | |
way to mark the 100 years since
women were given the right to vote. | 2:53:08 | 2:53:15 | |
But that's exactly what
the documentary 'The Secret Life | 2:53:15 | 2:53:17 | |
of Five Year Olds' has done
with an all female cast | 2:53:17 | 2:53:19 | |
and they have plenty to say
about women's position | 2:53:19 | 2:53:21 | |
in society today. | 2:53:21 | 2:53:24 | |
We have two stars and their mums
with us shortly. | 2:53:24 | 2:53:29 | |
Let's take a look at of some
of the girls discussing | 2:53:29 | 2:53:32 | |
what a feminist is. | 2:53:32 | 2:53:33 | |
You get to decide which activity
you are going to do. | 2:53:33 | 2:53:36 | |
Your first choice is called
Hook The Duck. | 2:53:36 | 2:53:38 | |
The second game is called
Tunnel Of Terror. | 2:53:38 | 2:53:41 | |
No! No!
Yes! Yes! Yes! | 2:53:41 | 2:53:48 | |
We're going to decide
by having a vote. | 2:53:48 | 2:53:52 | |
Yay.
A vote? | 2:53:52 | 2:53:56 | |
If you're sitting on the blue step,
you get to have the phot. | 2:53:56 | 2:54:04 | |
-- the vote. | 2:54:04 | 2:54:10 | |
Not fair.
I wanted to vote. | 2:54:10 | 2:54:13 | |
Oh, dear.
I wanted to vote. | 2:54:13 | 2:54:14 | |
It's so powerful, isn't it. | 2:54:14 | 2:54:15 | |
For an arbitrary reason, she can't
do what the others are able to do. | 2:54:15 | 2:54:19 | |
So poignant. | 2:54:19 | 2:54:22 | |
I'll give you my vote, if you want. | 2:54:22 | 2:54:25 | |
Thanks, Dorothy.
Thank you. | 2:54:25 | 2:54:33 | |
I love this! | 2:54:33 | 2:54:38 | |
We're joined by Consultant
Clinical Psychologist, | 2:54:38 | 2:54:39 | |
Dr Elizabeth Kilbey,
Darcy and her mum Laura. | 2:54:39 | 2:54:41 | |
Along with Zaina, who is
with her mum Mehmoona. | 2:54:41 | 2:54:46 | |
Thank you so much for coming to join
us. We will talk to you about what | 2:54:46 | 2:54:52 | |
you did this experiment first.
Darcy, you were sitting on different | 2:54:52 | 2:54:58 | |
seats, and depending where you sat,
you got a vote, what did you think | 2:54:58 | 2:55:02 | |
when some people could vote? I
thought it was not fair. What about | 2:55:02 | 2:55:10 | |
you? I thought it wasn't fair, too.
People got upset, didn't they, | 2:55:10 | 2:55:16 | |
didn't they?
I don't like to see people upset. | 2:55:16 | 2:55:28 | |
Darcy, everybody watching you this
morning and watching the programme | 2:55:28 | 2:55:31 | |
would make the same noise, because
that is a lovely thing to do. | 2:55:31 | 2:55:39 | |
I love the programme anyway, but
this one, you decided to have girls. | 2:55:39 | 2:55:46 | |
Tell us about the experiment, what
is it and why were you doing it? As | 2:55:46 | 2:55:51 | |
you know, it is 100 years since
women got the vote. We are trying to | 2:55:51 | 2:55:55 | |
understand how girls understand the
issue of equality. You vote on what | 2:55:55 | 2:56:04 | |
happens next or not. We tried to
help the girls understand that, | 2:56:04 | 2:56:08 | |
actually, the power is in the people
that get the vote. They make a | 2:56:08 | 2:56:12 | |
decision about everybody. The girls
worked out, it's not fair. What was | 2:56:12 | 2:56:18 | |
it like for you as mothers watching
your daughters go through that | 2:56:18 | 2:56:22 | |
process? I wanted her to be on the
programme because, I think, voting, | 2:56:22 | 2:56:32 | |
she doesn't understand it much. But
when you talk about voting now, she | 2:56:32 | 2:56:36 | |
talks a lot about rights. But she
hadn't gone through that. I think it | 2:56:36 | 2:56:46 | |
was nice to see how kind she is.
Talking to the doctors, they said | 2:56:46 | 2:56:55 | |
she was kind, and it didn't matter
to her. She said it made her upset, | 2:56:55 | 2:57:02 | |
and we saw the people crying. Why
did you choose to give your vote | 2:57:02 | 2:57:07 | |
away as well? Are the people need to
have a vote as well. You make a very | 2:57:07 | 2:57:15 | |
good point. As a mother, watching
your daughters do that, it must be a | 2:57:15 | 2:57:23 | |
proud moment.
It reimbursed what I thought Darcy | 2:57:23 | 2:57:29 | |
was like, being a fly on the wall,
and seeing what a personality she | 2:57:29 | 2:57:34 | |
has got. I was really proud. We will
look at another clip of you two in | 2:57:34 | 2:57:39 | |
the programme, you discuss what a
feminist is. What is a feminist? | 2:57:39 | 2:57:48 | |
Maybe it is a scientist.
A chemist. Let's say, scientist, I | 2:57:48 | 2:57:57 | |
don't know. A feminist stand up for
women. It can be a woman or a man, | 2:57:57 | 2:58:03 | |
or a girl or a boy. If two persons
were there, and two persons were | 2:58:03 | 2:58:13 | |
driving, and we went straight across
and one went that way, as opposed to | 2:58:13 | 2:58:17 | |
that way, that's a feminist.
LAUGHTER | 2:58:17 | 2:58:22 | |
What a brilliant explanation.
Clearly these are big concepts to | 2:58:22 | 2:58:30 | |
grasp, but some of them absolutely
have it! | 2:58:30 | 2:58:37 | |
She was amazing in her ability to
save this is what is fair and right, | 2:58:37 | 2:58:42 | |
it does not matter if you are a boy
or girl, it is about equality. That | 2:58:42 | 2:58:46 | |
is what we are trying to show from
the girls. Equality is giving | 2:58:46 | 2:58:50 | |
everybody the same starting
position, saying that nobody can't | 2:58:50 | 2:58:54 | |
do anything for any reason. From you
two, do you have any ideas what you | 2:58:54 | 2:59:01 | |
want to be when you grow up? A
doctor. What about you? I have two. | 2:59:01 | 2:59:10 | |
I would like to be a vet, and an
inventor. A vet and an inventor. At | 2:59:10 | 2:59:22 | |
the same time? One at the weekend,
and one during the week? On a | 2:59:22 | 2:59:29 | |
Saturday and a Sunday in... Have you
invented something? A chair that | 2:59:29 | 2:59:37 | |
does what ever you say. One night
you can say anything to the chair | 2:59:37 | 2:59:40 | |
and it does it? That is great!
Or did you learn about the children | 2:59:40 | 2:59:51 | |
and the differences between now and
100 years ago? We had a lovely | 2:59:51 | 2:59:56 | |
example of when we showed the
children what a 19 18th classroom | 2:59:56 | 3:00:00 | |
would look like 100 years from now.
The girls dressed up in clothes the | 3:00:00 | 3:00:05 | |
girls would have won. The lessons
they would have learned were rugby | 3:00:05 | 3:00:10 | |
eating and washing. They were
indignant about learning that. | 3:00:10 | 3:00:16 | |
Nowadays, they do the same as boys.
It was important to remind ourselves | 3:00:16 | 3:00:21 | |
how far we had come. The girls
expect to be treated the same. A | 3:00:21 | 3:00:27 | |
final thought from you two mums,
looking at that and seeing what | 3:00:27 | 3:00:33 | |
girls perceptions of who they could
be. | 3:00:33 | 3:00:40 | |
She thinks she could be anybody, and
that's a great way to look at | 3:00:40 | 3:00:44 | |
things. Whenever you ask as she
changes her profession. Sometimes | 3:00:44 | 3:00:49 | |
you want to be a doctor, a
hairdresser, an astronaut. So a | 3:00:49 | 3:00:55 | |
plethora of different things. Darcy
wants to do to -- two jobs at once. | 3:00:55 | 3:01:05 | |
What do you want to do? I don't
know. You've got a long time to make | 3:01:05 | 3:01:10 | |
a decision. We always welcome
doctors and inventors! Thank you | 3:01:10 | 3:01:17 | |
very much indeed. | 3:01:17 | 3:01:19 | |
You can watch 'The Secret Life
of Five-year-olds: All Girls' | 3:01:19 | 3:01:22 | |
on Channel 4, tomorrow at 8pm. | 3:01:22 | 3:01:26 | |
And we will be celebrating 100 years
since women's suffrage | 3:01:26 | 3:01:28 | |
with a special edition
of Breakfast tomorrow morning. | 3:01:28 | 3:01:36 | |
I'm not needed tomorrow, I? I think
you're always needed. I can watch it | 3:01:38 | 3:01:45 | |
at home like the rest of our
viewers! You'll be doing the school | 3:01:45 | 3:01:49 | |
run! | 3:01:49 | 3:01:52 | |
We'll be speaking to the Ellis
family in a minute. | 3:01:52 | 3:01:54 | |
They've been sampling delicacies
such as tripe and "pan | 3:01:54 | 3:01:56 | |
haggerty" for the new series
of Back In Time For Tea, | 3:01:56 | 3:01:59 | |
which looks at how grub in the North
of England reveals what life | 3:01:59 | 3:02:02 | |
was like for working class families
over the course of 100 years. | 3:02:02 | 3:02:09 | |
The food did not go well. The food
didn't stay down! | 3:02:09 | 3:02:13 | |
Before that, a last,
brief look at the headlines | 3:02:13 | 3:03:48 | |
Plenty more on our website
at the usual address. | 3:03:48 | 3:03:50 | |
Bye for now. | 3:03:50 | 3:03:57 | |
This year marks the centenary
of the end of the First World War, | 3:03:57 | 3:04:00 | |
how much life has changed
for working class families | 3:04:00 | 3:04:02 | |
is the subject of a new BBC series
of Back In Time For Tea. | 3:04:02 | 3:04:08 | |
The Ellis family from Bradford
chronicle day-to-day life | 3:04:08 | 3:04:10 | |
across the last 100 years. | 3:04:10 | 3:04:13 | |
In the first episode
they are transported back to 1918, | 3:04:13 | 3:04:16 | |
where they cook and eat tripe pie
and not all of Ellis | 3:04:16 | 3:04:19 | |
clan were impressed. | 3:04:19 | 3:04:26 | |
Let's take a look. | 3:04:26 | 3:04:28 | |
Ta-dah! | 3:04:28 | 3:04:31 | |
What is that? | 3:04:31 | 3:04:32 | |
That is... | 3:04:32 | 3:04:33 | |
Fish pie. | 3:04:33 | 3:04:35 | |
Without the fish. | 3:04:35 | 3:04:38 | |
What, with tripe? | 3:04:38 | 3:04:39 | |
Yeah. | 3:04:39 | 3:04:40 | |
Help yourselves. | 3:04:40 | 3:04:41 | |
That don't look too bad. | 3:04:41 | 3:04:42 | |
Do you all know what tripe is? | 3:04:42 | 3:04:44 | |
It might be a northern classic,
but none of the Ellises have | 3:04:44 | 3:04:46 | |
ever tried it before. | 3:04:46 | 3:04:48 | |
Do you think this used
to be a weekly dish? | 3:04:48 | 3:04:50 | |
Oh my god. | 3:04:50 | 3:04:51 | |
Yeah. | 3:04:51 | 3:04:52 | |
That's really bad. | 3:04:52 | 3:04:55 | |
Don't smell it. | 3:04:55 | 3:04:57 | |
I see what you mean! | 3:04:57 | 3:05:00 | |
This is stressful. | 3:05:00 | 3:05:03 | |
Ready? | 3:05:03 | 3:05:04 | |
One, two, three. | 3:05:04 | 3:05:07 | |
SHRIEKS. | 3:05:07 | 3:05:09 | |
LAUGHTER. | 3:05:09 | 3:05:14 | |
Look at his face! | 3:05:14 | 3:05:16 | |
It's the chewiness and the cowiness. | 3:05:16 | 3:05:18 | |
If mum doesn't like it,
you know it's bad! | 3:05:18 | 3:05:20 | |
No, he's going to be sick! | 3:05:20 | 3:05:24 | |
Are you all right? | 3:05:24 | 3:05:25 | |
This is bad. | 3:05:25 | 3:05:26 | |
LAUGHTER. | 3:05:26 | 3:05:34 | |
Oh dear! It makes me feel ill! | 3:05:36 | 3:05:38 | |
And the Ellis family
are with us now: John, Lesley, | 3:05:38 | 3:05:41 | |
Caitlin, Freya and Harvey. | 3:05:41 | 3:05:43 | |
Good morning, all. Thank you for
joining us. Look at your face | 3:05:43 | 3:05:47 | |
thinking about the tripe again!
You've confirmed my feelings. Why | 3:05:47 | 3:05:52 | |
would you want to take part in a
programme like this?! LAUGHTER I was | 3:05:52 | 3:05:57 | |
a really big fan. I really loved the
programme. When I saw they were | 3:05:57 | 3:06:03 | |
looking for a northern family I
thought, we really fit the bill. | 3:06:03 | 3:06:06 | |
They wanted a northern family with
three children, so... There you are. | 3:06:06 | 3:06:12 | |
It take you through the decades and
each time you lived in that decade | 3:06:12 | 3:06:16 | |
for seven or eight days and then
they came and changed your house | 3:06:16 | 3:06:19 | |
around to transform it into the next
decade. That's right. It was close | 3:06:19 | 3:06:24 | |
to my heart because I renovated the
house in the first place. To see a | 3:06:24 | 3:06:28 | |
transform through the different eras
was quite surprising to me. The | 3:06:28 | 3:06:34 | |
first time we went into the house on
the first day and saw it | 3:06:34 | 3:06:38 | |
transformed, there were hardly
anything in it because it was 1918. | 3:06:38 | 3:06:43 | |
As well as living in those decades,
your eating the food... LAUGHTER I | 3:06:43 | 3:06:51 | |
avoided eating most things, I didn't
eat the tripe or the oysters either! | 3:06:51 | 3:06:56 | |
The things everyone else struggled
with I somehow managed to get away | 3:06:56 | 3:06:59 | |
with not eating them. The reality is
you would have had to have eaten it, | 3:06:59 | 3:07:07 | |
wouldn't you? I know. We had
chicken's feet as well and none of | 3:07:07 | 3:07:12 | |
us ate that. You would eat the
normal meals we were set every night | 3:07:12 | 3:07:17 | |
and that was strange because there
was a lot of food there. The things | 3:07:17 | 3:07:22 | |
we were eating with a plain, like
lard on bread for breakfast. We all | 3:07:22 | 3:07:27 | |
ate that and were living in it and
eating what they would have eaten. | 3:07:27 | 3:07:34 | |
What did you miss about modern life?
Was it screen time? Definitely. I | 3:07:34 | 3:07:44 | |
really struggled because I've got
friends all over the UK, Scotland, | 3:07:44 | 3:07:49 | |
Essex, Bristol. I communicate with
them through social media and I get | 3:07:49 | 3:07:53 | |
updates. Having that taken away was
really difficult because I wanted to | 3:07:53 | 3:07:58 | |
communicate with them. Where you
going to say something? Me too. I've | 3:07:58 | 3:08:03 | |
got friends from different countries
so it was hard to get in touch with | 3:08:03 | 3:08:06 | |
them. I miss the decorations of
modern times. Back then it was quite | 3:08:06 | 3:08:13 | |
dark and it dulled my mood. It
really affected your outlook on | 3:08:13 | 3:08:18 | |
everything as well. Yeah. Did it
dull your mood? It definitely dulled | 3:08:18 | 3:08:24 | |
the food! The mood? Not for me,
actually. I really enjoyed the early | 3:08:24 | 3:08:31 | |
eras. Just because the kids had
nothing to do but hang out with us | 3:08:31 | 3:08:36 | |
and we thought that was great! How
was that you? It was good, we just | 3:08:36 | 3:08:42 | |
lived playing cards. Obviously the
best at that! Turn everything into a | 3:08:42 | 3:08:49 | |
competition! We've seen the tripe,
shall we have a look at the oysters? | 3:08:49 | 3:08:53 | |
This is a rare bank holiday weekend
away in Blackpool. Let's see how | 3:08:53 | 3:08:58 | |
they went down. I actually think
this is my first oyster. Hopefully | 3:08:58 | 3:09:05 | |
it's not your last, there's quite a
few there! My dad used eat them but | 3:09:05 | 3:09:10 | |
I've never had one. MUSIC
Urgh! It's like swallowing sea | 3:09:10 | 3:09:24 | |
water. I'm not doing it! LAUGHTER
Let's leave them to the posh people! | 3:09:24 | 3:09:33 | |
LAUGHTER I wish you could have heard
the laughter in the studio! | 3:09:33 | 3:09:41 | |
the laughter in the studio! What do
you think you learned from doing | 3:09:41 | 3:09:46 | |
this? I think the whole experience.
We worked in a textile mill, in a | 3:09:46 | 3:09:50 | |
coal mine, and it's the whole
experience from start to finish. I | 3:09:50 | 3:09:55 | |
felt as though I'd lived in my
father's shoes and also my | 3:09:55 | 3:09:59 | |
grandfather's shoes, maybe my great
grandparents shoes. All the way | 3:09:59 | 3:10:03 | |
through the process I really enjoyed
it. Throwing myself into it as well. | 3:10:03 | 3:10:08 | |
You've talked about the positive
side as well. I know the screen time | 3:10:08 | 3:10:12 | |
was an | 3:10:12 | 3:10:17 | |
was an issue but did you learn
something from it? Was it something | 3:10:17 | 3:10:20 | |
you could take away from working on
the programme? I've learned I don't | 3:10:20 | 3:10:22 | |
suit blue eye shadow, I've learnt
how to walk in heels, I've learnt | 3:10:22 | 3:10:25 | |
not | 3:10:25 | 3:10:31 | |
not to use toilet roll where you can
get paper cuts. You definitely learn | 3:10:31 | 3:10:35 | |
not to take things for granted. You
appreciate everything you have now. | 3:10:35 | 3:10:40 | |
I definitely feel like I do is. Is
it the same for you? Yeah. Just | 3:10:40 | 3:10:49 | |
every day life, I appreciate taking
my dog out for a walk because that's | 3:10:49 | 3:10:54 | |
what I missed. The dog couldn't be
with us when they were filming. You | 3:10:54 | 3:11:00 | |
said you enjoyed some of the older
time periods, did the rest of you | 3:11:00 | 3:11:03 | |
have a favourite decade you are
living in? I liked the 70s the most. | 3:11:03 | 3:11:10 | |
But they've all got a different era
they like. Why? I liked the clothes | 3:11:10 | 3:11:16 | |
and I also liked the decor in the
house. It was like purple squares, I | 3:11:16 | 3:11:23 | |
loved it! I'd say the early eras
like 1918-1939. | 3:11:23 | 3:11:36 | |
like 1918-1939. And the episode
where we just played cards. The | 3:11:36 | 3:11:39 | |
simplicity of it was quite an
experience. Just nice to spend time | 3:11:39 | 3:11:45 | |
with each other. What about you? We
both liked the 60s. We did | 3:11:45 | 3:11:51 | |
everything in the 60s. We got so
much more autonomy. Before that we | 3:11:51 | 3:11:55 | |
followed what our parents did and
were stuck in the kitchen. It was | 3:11:55 | 3:11:58 | |
nothing like that, and the clothes
were so much better. We got | 3:11:58 | 3:12:03 | |
trousers. We even got a Chinese!
LAUGHTER What about you? The 60s was | 3:12:03 | 3:12:12 | |
my worst because everyone moved on.
Up until then with all been stuck in | 3:12:12 | 3:12:18 | |
the house together but in the 60s
everyone else got a life but me. I | 3:12:18 | 3:12:24 | |
will still stuck in that gender role
in the house. That's so interesting, | 3:12:24 | 3:12:30 | |
so you felt isolated? I genuinely
felt but because everyone was at the | 3:12:30 | 3:12:34 | |
house and I was stuck there with no
cameras, just listening to 60s music | 3:12:34 | 3:12:41 | |
and playing Patience. The 70s were a
real revelation. I felt like the | 3:12:41 | 3:12:46 | |
hair was a better name for more
freedom. In the 60s it was flowing | 3:12:46 | 3:12:56 | |
free and that represented life as
well in the 70s. What will you take | 3:12:56 | 3:13:03 | |
away from it? Will there be purple
wallpaper in a house somewhere? I'd | 3:13:03 | 3:13:07 | |
love to keep it but I do think
Leslie would! -- I don't think | 3:13:07 | 3:13:13 | |
Leslie would. They are going to go
to loose leaf tea instead of tea | 3:13:13 | 3:13:24 | |
bags. We are going to an old
whistling kettle. Why? In the early | 3:13:24 | 3:13:29 | |
eras we didn't get that much to eat
and the kettle, putting the kettle | 3:13:29 | 3:13:35 | |
on was a real warm, comforting
thing. I kind of liked that. In the | 3:13:35 | 3:13:43 | |
first two or three episodes we
didn't have any hot water either, so | 3:13:43 | 3:13:46 | |
we had to boil everything. | 3:13:46 | 3:13:49 | |
Back In Time For Tea is on BBC Two
tomorrow night at 8pm. | 3:13:49 | 3:13:52 | |
That's all we've got time for. | 3:13:52 | 3:13:54 | |
We'll be back from 6.00am tomorrow. | 3:13:54 | 3:13:55 | |
Now on BBC One it's time
for Countryfile Winter Diaries, | 3:13:55 | 3:13:58 | |
and the team are in Anglesey,
celebrating its landscape | 3:13:58 | 3:14:00 | |
and wildlife. | 3:14:00 | 3:14:02 |